S.E.L.F. REPORT, Newsletter of the Society for Education in Laissez-Faire, Feb. 1970 : Right-Wing Rationale for Non Recognition of Indian Rights, by Rosalie Nichols, 24pp. The April 1970 issue contains, apart from some short articles: Rosalie Nichols, Social Darwinism or, How to Turn People Off to Laissez Faire, a book review of: Hofstadter, Richard: Social Darwinism in American Thought, Boston, Beacon Press, 1968, 248pp. This review, 8pp, both issues, only one on hand, in PP 1133.

SABRE FOUNDATION JOURNALISM FUND, 1p leaflet, 1977, on how to apply for up to $ 1500 to investigate the government program of your choice, in PP 1311: 135.

SABRE JOURNALISM FUND, 1p, in PP 1432/1439: 465.

SACCO & VANCETTI Vigil, 1997, 1pp leaflet, with some notes by J.Z., in PP 1420/22: 168. – THAT was NOT the greatest crime by a State in this century. So, why treat it as such? – J.Z., 10.9.97.

SACCO & VANZETTI, The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti, written during the seven years (1920-1927) of their imprisonment, 1929, 414 pp, 29x, in PP 562.

SACCO & VANZETTI, the story of -, by? 5pp, in PP 1165.

SACCO & VANZETTI: HOLAN, DAVID, The Martyrdom of Sacco & Vanzetti, 3pp, in PP 1432/1439: 108. – In the private freedom library of Michael Green, L.A., I saw one title with a very long bibliography of writings on this case. – Isn’t it about time we paid attention to some other past and especially future victims of statism and to all the ideas so far advanced to get us from here to liberty? Concern merely with anarchist history can be largely a waste of time – if one does not learn sufficient from it for rightful and sensible future actions. – J.Z., 10.10.97.

SADE, MARQUIS DE, Anarchist features of his writings, from a selection of his writings by Gorer, Geoffrey, The Revolutionary Ideas of the Marquis de Sade, 1934, London, 264pp, can be found in PP 524.

SADE, MARQUIS DE, libertarian aspects of his writings explored by Robert Anton Wilson, 5pp, with some opinions by Geoffrey Wagner and Saul Heller, in PP 936.

SAFIRE, WILLIAM, Greatest of virtues miscast as great sin. Without greed there is not wherewithal for generosity, 1p clipping, n.d., from The NYT, in PP 1102. If an important ideas could be convincingly stated in even less than 1 page that would be even better. I seek short statements on cause and cure of unemployment, concentrating on the monetary freedom aspect of this problem. – J.Z.

SAG PAYMENT SYSTEM OF KURT ZUBE, reviewed, PP 810.

SAGEHORN, ROBERT & MEULEN, HENRY, Some of their correspondence, 1968-78, 29pp, in PP 791.

SAGEHORN, ROBERT E., Notes on Parker and Ellingham and Stirner, 1p, in PP 1420/22: 441.

SAKHAROV, A.D., My Country and the World, here only in a 4pp review by Frank Knopfelmacher: Free Russia, 36x, in QUADRANT, in PP 418-419, p30.

SAKOLSKY, RON, Revision of the Bill of Rights, 1p, in PP 1,043.

SAL PARADISE, notes on panarchism, in TC 119 of 29 Apr. 84, with comments by John Zube, 29 July 89, part of 15pp, 29x, in PP 870.

SAL PARADISE, notes on panarchism, in TC 123-155, with comments by J. Zube, in ON PANARCHY, No. XVI, 126pp, 29x, in PP 901.

SALE, KIRKPATRICK, A Vision of Bioregional Self-Sufficiency, A World of Smallness and Diversity, 2pp, in PP 1386/91: 904. – Society means trade, not self-sufficiency. Not only local trade, either, but world trade – wherever and whenever it pays its way. Free trade, world-wide, keeps local producers on their toes and supports consumer and individual sovereignty. – J.Z., 24.2.97.

SALERNO, JOSEPH, The Machinery of Friedman, 2pp, in PP 1312/1314: 109. – Sometimes, articles or books with the title: The Machinery of Freedom”, remind me of the proud owner of a machine shop who asserts to his guests, admiring his equipment: This is all the machinery that exists or can be built, in the whole world, forever! – J.Z.

SAMIZDAT EXPRESS, THE B & R SAMIZDAT EXPRESS, West Roxbury, published by Richard Seltzer, published on disk with the appeal: “Please Copy This Disk”. Printout, 95/96, somewhat condensed by me, by eliminating white spaces: 144 pp, in PP 1409/10: 243. – I have not asked for or received later copies as yet. A good survey of what has been happening on the Internet, e.g. by Project Gutenberg. Internet texts are provided on disks as an alternative and affordable publishing format which is, unfortunately, still all too little used. – J.Z.

SAMUELS, LAWRENCE, Taxation Is Legalized Theft, 6pp, in PP 1445: 12. – Have I still missed out on some other SIL leaflets? Please, do supply them to me in good photocopies. All such leaflets and articles combined, alphabetized and cross-indexed, would form an interesting libertarian encyclopaedia. On microfiche it could be of almost any size. Likewise, on floppy disks and CD-ROMs – and also very affordable. Help to get the materials and the permissions together! – Presently probably no one has a complete collection of libertarian short essays on leaflets. – J.Z., 6/99.

SAUNDERS, NICHOLAS, E for Ecstasy, 1p leaflet for the book, ISI, in PP 1267. – I don’t expect liberation to be chemically supported, except by coffee and tea. – There may be intelligence expanding drugs around by now, but do they increase judgment and multiply sound ideas? – J.Z.

SAUNDERS, PETER, Measuring the Size and Growth of the Public Sector in Australia, CIS, 1986, 38pp, 29x, in PP 733.

SAUR VERLAG GMBH & CO KG, Muenchen, Circular, 1p, on its Subject Guide to Microforms in Print, 1995, in PP 1240. If only they offered it cheaply on microfiche! Then I could afford a copy. Since there are only 2,500 printed impressions, only a small fraction of all libraries can have a copy. And there it might mainly be hidden in their catalog department. I bought the 1981 edition when it was new and in 1990, or afterwards, got the 1988 edition secondhand, very cheaply. Advertise in it? I got not a single response upon its hundreds of free entries for LMP. – J.Z.

SAUR Verlag, extract, 11pp, on microfilms from its 86/87 Katalog, in PP 907-910.

SAXON, KURT, Interview on Survival in the Eighties, 3pp, 29x, in PP 316-318.

SAXONHOUSE, ARLENE W., Comedy in Callipolis: Animal Imagery in the Republic, THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW 72, Sep. 78, 668-901, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p717, headed: Plato’s Republic as a Political Dystopia.

SAY, J.B., Correspondance avec J.B. Say, in PP 1352/54.

SAY, JEAN-BAPTISTE, A Treatise on Political Economy or the Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Wealth, 1st American edition 1821, translated from the 4th edition of the French, by C.R. Prinsep, 5th ed. 1832, 6th ed. 1834, here reproduced from the 1880 reprint, 488pp, in PP 1167 & 1168. Not quite as clear and stylish as Bastiat, but as truthful. – J.Z.

SCANNING MICROFICHE, 2pp by Ann-Marie McGirr, of Spirit Technologies, Penrith, NSW, Australia, with 2pp by John Zube to A-M McGirr, in PP 1,030. The technology is there and nearly faultless – but who is going to use it and pay its bills? – coming still to ca. $ 1 per page. It makes a difference if you just want one book manuscript text computerized or hundreds of books. What is widely perceived to be an information ideal, largely by those who do not use is as such, is often rather expensive and also relatively inconvenient or difficult to use, in spite of the total convenience features it does offer. Not everyone can be a jet line pilot, in the information sphere. For some purposes hang gliders and single engine prop planes are better. Hammers and screwdrivers are still useful, in spite of steam hammer and motorized screw holders and drivers. By all means, get all my fiche scanned. But remember, I do not own copyrights for many of them. Make you own deals. – J.Z.

SCHAEFER, DAVID LEWIS, The Good, the Beautiful, and the Useful: Montaigne’s Transvaluation of Values, THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW 73, March 79, 139-154, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p912, headed: Montaigne: the Virtues of Modernity.

SCHEIBER, HARRY N., American Constitutional History and the New Legal History; Complementary Themse in Two Modes, THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN HISTORY 68, Sep. 81, 337-350, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1647, headed: The New Legal History & Constitutional History.

SCHEIBER, HARRY N., Regulation, Property Rights, and the Definition of “The Market”: Law and the American Economy, THE JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC HISTORY 41, March 81, 103-110, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1583, headed: Law and the American Economy.

SCHEPPERLE, ILSE, Pierre Ramus, Marxismuskritik u. Sozialismus-konzeption, Dissertation, 1986, 286 S., 1-283, in PP 1454. I tried in vain to contact the author. By now she might be married and living under another name. Anyhow, as a left anarchist she would hardly insist upon copyrights. Moreover, under present conditions, this microfiche edition is certainly no commercial threat to a print-on-paper edition but it does make her labour of love accessible to the few who are interested in it, while, as far as I know, no printed edition of it has appeared as yet. – J.Z.

SCHERMAN, HARRY, The Promies Men Live By, review, PP 1150.

SCHERMAN, HARRY, The Promises Men Live By, reviewed by Carl Watner, 1p, in PP 1150. My first impression of this book was good and I wanted even to microfilm it. But upon my second perusal I saw some of it flaws and now I am not so eager. J.Z.

SCHMID, FRANZ, Das Gebrauchtum, Manuskript, 1933, 35 S., in PP 1276. From Kurt Zube’s collection. Schmid was a Malthusian and favoured first occupation. Worse, he either was a racist or he felt that he had to make some concessions to Nazi censorship. But, on the other hand, he favoured free competition, even monetary freedom. – J.Z.

SCHOENHEIMER, HENRY, 1.) Just how young is too young? 1972, (On education) 1p, 2.) So you don’t want to be well adjusted, 1973, 1p, 36x, in PP 714, 3.) The Progressive School’s Progress, 1972, 1p, 29x, in PP 713, 4.) There’s no such thing as the model school, 1975, 1p, 36x, in PP 714, 5.) Your Child and the New Schools, 5pp, 1973, 29x, in PP 713.

SCHOENSTEIN PLAN, in Kurt Zube’s versions, reviewed, PP 810.

SCHOFIELD, WILLIAM, The Impossibility of Socialism, London, 1907, Liberty & Property Defence League, 15pp, in PP 980. (I would reproduce all their output – if I could get hold of it. But some of their listed titles do not look all that attractive. J.Z.)

SCHOOL OF LIVING, Green is for Growth and Global Peace. Wear a Green Ribbon! 1p leaflet, 29x, in PP 423. (Luckily, it represents many other & better ideas! -JZ.)

SCHOOL OF LIVING, Indenture for the Possession of Land, 4pp draft, 29x, in PP 723.

SCHOOL OF LIVING, Land Reform Through Cooperation, 6pp leaflet, 24x, in PP 56.

SCHOOL OF LIVING, Moral and Material Withholding Action, 2pp, 24x, in PP 7.

SCHOOL OF LIVING, PP 55, 56, 427, 995, 1048/49,

SCHOOL OF LIVING, Strategy Map for Geonomic Transformation, 1p, 29x, in PP 865.

SCHOOL OF LIVING, THE, 2pp leaflet, in PP 1250.

SCHOOL OF LIVING, THE, Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws and Preamble to the By-Laws, 7pp, in PP 1386/91: 990.

SCHOOLAND, KEN, Feast and Famine: an Age of Irony, the Disaster of International Foreign Aid Programs, 6pp, LI leaflet, in PP 890.

SCHOOLLAND, KEN, A Libertarian Odyssey, 4pp, in PP 1287/89p261.

SCHOOLLAND, KEN, Oliver Twist, USA, in PP 1373/75: 113-118.

SCHOOLLAND, KEN, The Adventures of Jonathan Gullible, a world-wide publishing odyssey of free market ideas, 2pp, in PP 1287/89p453. While publishing remains tied to the “paper tiger”, it is neither sufficiently free, comprehensive, wide-spread, multi-lingual, permanent, cheap and easy enough and hard copy reference collections remain largely immobilized. – Alas, Ken is likely to keep his writings out of the alternative media, too. – The good is the enemy of the best! – J.Z.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, 2pp letter to accompany a review copy of his: A Challenge to Sex Censors, in PP 987.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, A New Concept of Liberty, from an evolutionary psychologist: Theodore Schroeder, selections from his writings, with a biographical outline by Joseph Ishill, with some notes by Don Werkheiser, Oriole Press, Berkeley Heights, New Jersey, 1940, 234pp, in PP 987.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, Free Speech for Radicals, enlarged edition, 1916, indexed, 213pp, in PP 986. I have also on hand a 3 fiche edition of this book by Gaska, in which pages are badly reproduced, on their sides and often askew. Some people seem to have never heard of quality control. I sell these 3, with which I am stuck through a sight unseen swap, which cost me custom duties on top, for $ 3. As an instructive lesson on mistakes to avoid in microfilming, they are a bargain. I would be game to read them only with a fiche reader that has a rotation facility for its plate holder. – J.Z.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, To the Honorable Herbert Hoover, President, and to the Congress of the United States, A Petition from Puerto Rico, Dec. 1931, with a clipping from PUERTO RICO PROGRESS, 3pp, in PP 986.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, What About You? Edited and with an introduction by Ethel Clyde, N.Y., Psychological Library, 1951, 60pp, in PP 987.

SCHROEDER, THEODORE, Where Speech Is Not Free – In the U.S.A., An Appeal to the Record, by Theodore Schroeder of the Free Speech League, The Open Road Press, Mays Landing, New Jersey, 1944, 59pp, in PP 989.

SCHULER, KURT, Competitive Note Issue Episodes, March 89, 3pp, 29x, in PP 865. (I couldn’t see any obvious gaps in his list. A very worthwhile compilation that might spur on further research into these and perhaps some other such episodes. Conventional history is largely an agreed upon fable – as an old proverb says. –

SCHULER, KURT, Currency Boards, 1992, 272pp, with some correspondence between Kurt Schuler and John Zube, 15pp, in PP 1182.

SCHULMAN, J. NEIL, The Paperless Books Are Here! 1990, 28pp: 114-120, in PP 1522. – And they disappeared again with SoftServ Publishing Services, of which J. Neil Schulman was the enterprising president. Before this booklet disappears as well from sight, I better microfiche it. Paper consumption has gone up. Electronic publishing, on disks, text-only CD-ROMs and on-line has not yet taken off properly, at least as far as freedom texts are concerned. But sooner or later it might. However, if freedom lovers make as little use of their digital freedom of expression and information option as they made so far of their micrographic ones, then the outlook is still rather grim. I would like to know how the page output of thousands, if not ten-thousands of anarchist and libertarian computer users compares with the page output of LMP on microfiche. — J.Z., 11.11.1998. – SOME FURTHER NOTES TO SCHULMAN’S “THE PAPERLESS BOOKS ARE HERE!”: Apart from the paper original, microfiched publications are also “paperless” and so are books on audio and video tapes. Such alternatives should be mentioned and cost comparisons should be made with all alternative media, per page, for 1-10, 11-100,101-1,000 “impressions” etc. – Why did SoftServ fail? I do not know. You tell me. Perhaps the project was made too complicated with its conditions, too insistent upon copyrights and it might have ignored the extent to which authors could help themselves via their computer systems and connection to the Internet. They could easily have duplicated disked books themselves and produced them only upon demand. Moreover, they could have assembled collected works and whole libraries on text-only CD-ROMs. For my eldest grandchild I bought recently a CD-ROM of “The Library of the Future”, containing ca. 3,500 classical works, including some pro-freedom ones, from one of the bargain tables at HARVEY NORMAN’s Super-Computer Store, at Campbelltown, – for only $ 20. Normally it would have been ca. $ 60 according to advertisements. Another such edition, of classical books, is offered also for ca. A $ 60. Now, where are the anarchist or libertarian counterparts? Back in 1990, in an L.A bookshop, I met a N.Y. anarchist who intended to put 500 anarchist works onto one CD-ROM. I referred him to SoftServ – and have never heard of him again. – But basically SoftServ was a good idea and someone may try again and realize it successfully, perhaps more for those writings that are not copyrighted or for which publication counts more for their authors than earnings do. – Gutenberg Press and Books On Line have between them produced so far close to 10,000 titles – still only a fraction of the ca. 300 million books that have appeared. They seem to rely still more on key-boarding than on scanning and concentrate on long out of copyrights books. I would like to know whether they readily accept submissions of books on disks, for free duplication and distribution by them at whatever they want to charge for them, and inclusion in their lists. – Electronic screen reading was so far not very attractive and easy and did not promote comprehension and retention of read material as well as does print on paper. I know of no such comparison with the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of reading filmed material on microfilm reading machines. – Often the owners of digitized texts would want to print them out – and this can be expensive for long texts. To that would have to be added the binding costs, the larger space requirements for storage and the high postage costs for paper duplicates sent by mail. – Moreover, A4 print-outs do not fit easily into many bookshelves and might thus require special storage facilities. – Most of what Schulman said about conventional publishing and its drawbacks is correct. All alternatives to it ought to be explored and used, to the extent that they are convenient and affordable enough. – How difficult or easy would it to get libertarians or anarchists or both to agree upon filling the first libertarian or anarchist or combined and text-only CD-ROM, between them? I found so far only 2 who showed a limited interest in this option. I have now a CD-ROM read and write-once drive and a CD-ROM read and write repeatedly one – but will largely depend upon input from others or from the Internet. I would like to hear from anyone who has xyz MB’s to offer towards such a project. – Reading and publishing habits seem to be very hard to change, even among people who consider themselves to be pioneering innovators and radicals, and this in spite of the great cost savings and permanency in print as well as the complete publishing options that become feasible with alternative media. – The 1998 edition of “World’s Best Ideas, A Global Ideas Bank Compendium”, published by the Institute for Social Inventions, mentions a book club for new authors, on pages 227-229 and quotes Citron Press: “Each year, in excess of 30,000 manuscripts of fiction will be rejected by publishers and publishing agents. In fact most manuscripts submitted for consideration will not be read. A vanity press on the other hand would charge you anything up to L 8,000 to produce a small quantity; and would leave you to your own devices in the marketing of your book to the public.” That coop charges a one year membership fee of L 400 for a book submitted. Conditions apply. – Another interesting and award winning project is mentioned on pages 229 and 230: Xerox Corporation has announced a Book in Time service which uses their DocuTech 6180 Publisher machines to produce paperback books economically, with a 200 pp paperback costing about L 3, even in a “run” of only ONE copy. Publishers pay Xerox two cents per book page and 75 cents per colour page. There is a charge for registering books into the system in the first place, ca. $ 100 for a 300-page book, and for digital storage, about $ 12 per title per year. They can be printed within one or two days and transmitted electronically for printing at a location close to the customer and shipped directly to the customer or bookshop. – Books in Time can be accessed using the search engine at www.xeros.com or c/o Ray McClure,Xerox Corporation, 800 Phillips Rd., 102-12(c) Webster, New York14 580, USA, tel. 716 422 3586; ………………….. e-mail: ray.mcclure(a)usa.xerox.com. – I still find my fiche publishing easier and cheaper for me – but it might never become as popular as desktop publishing with a print on paper output still is, or text-only CD-ROM publishing might become. – I will rethink my remaining options once 2,000 PEACE PLANS issues have appeared and all the still unfinished major writing, editing ad compilation projects in the remaining less than 500. But in the meantime I do intend to somewhat advertise the micrographic freedom literature offers on the Internet and offer some books electronically. – Even Amazon Books has so far profited more from marketing its shares than from selling its printed books through electronic advertising. – J.Z., 21.11.98.

SCHULMAN, J. Neil, The Rainbow Cadenza, leaflet, 1p, 29x, in PP 725. – I wish a write like him, much resembling Robert Heinlein, would write a SF novel with a panarchist background. – I recommended it once to Poul Anderson but he was not interested, since it did not fit his world view of the preconditions for a lasting peace resting on liberty and justice. In some ways even some famous libertarian SF writers are not very radical or consistent. – J.Z., 12.6.98.

SCHULTZ, HARRY D., Panic and Crashes and How You Can Make Money out of them, review by CAMILLE IBBOTSON, 1p: 40, in PP 1468. – I wish money-makers like Harry Browne and Harry Schultz would rather have written books on how to avoid panics and crashes, like Ulrich von Beckerath, Dr. Walter Zander and Prof. Heinrich Rittershausen did, in their fundamental espousal of monetary freedom. Need I assure you that the latter 3 ended relatively poor? – J.Z.

SCHULZROCK, PETER, Faschismus Geht Immer Vom Staat Aus! 2pp leaflet, 29x, in PP 729. – It is, rather, one of the extreme products of of statism or etatism, which is still a popular secular religion in most countries. – J.Z., 19.6.99.

SCHUMACHER, E.F., DECENTRALIST LIBRARY, 17pp, 186-202, in PP 1465. – They hold that small is beautiful but do not intend to substitute small microfiche libraries for CENTRALIZED and large paper ones, which have to be specially housed. Microfiche libraries can also be easily and cheaply duplicated and shared. They can even be portable. All members could acquire such a decentralized library for their individual use. But this society is not yet prepared to go as far with its decentralism. – Compare also their CD-ROM options for very cheap text formats only, not multi-media formats, which tend to be expensive. – J.Z., 16.5.98.

SCHUMACHER, JOANN, How Grand is Grand Opera? 6pp: 78, in PP 1506/07. – How grand would it be without subsidies at the expense of tax slaves? – J.Z.

SCHUMACHER, TRAUTE, Dr., Die Entwicklung der Banknote in Deutschland, 1943 dissertation, 144 S., first time published here and now but only in German. Contains some important distinctions for monetary freedom and practice. Appended are: supplementary correspondence with Prof. H. Rittershausen and John Zube and some comments by Ulrich von Beckerath to an earlier draft, 23pp, in PP 792.

SCHWARTZ, GARY T., Tort Law and the Economy in 19th-Century America: A Reinterpretation, THE YALE LAW JOURNAL 90, 8, 1981, 1717-1775, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1867, headed: 19th-Century Tort Law & Industry.

SCHWARTZ, PEDRO, The Market and the Meta-market: A Review of the Contributions of the Economic Theory of Property Rights, Documento de Trabajo 1980-1981, Working paper from the Instituto de Economia de Marcado (Nunez de Balboa, 39, Madrid, Spain), 29pp, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1857, headed: The Economic Theory of Property Rights.

SCHWARTZ, PETER, Libertarianism: The Perversion of Liberty, an objectivist paper from THE INTELLECTUAL ACTIVIST, edited by Peter Schwartz, III/18 & 20 ff, May 10, 1985, 29pp, in PP 1358: 34. – Showing at least how perverse a view of liberty some liberty lovers can hold, not only some Stirnerites. Objectivists still uphold e.g. a territorial monopoly for their limited and thus supposedly ideal governments. I would gladly microfiche any replies that come my way. Also any further statements of the author’s position. – J.Z.

SCIENCE FICTION: A VISION OF LIBERTY, PP 696. (Alas, there is as yet no complete listing of anarchist and libertarian SF – although thousands of anarchists and libertarians have computers. Send your list to LMP for filming! By all means, add your comments. – J.Z.)

SCIENCE VS. JUNK SCIENCE, 3 titles, 1p flyer, in PP 1281/82.

SCIENCE, GENESIS OF, PP 830.

SCIENCE, See: BLACK, ROBERT, The Science-Society Crisis, 1p: 76, in PP 1498. – It is more a question of the State using and abusing science to interfere with society. – J.Z., 5.6.98.

SCIENTOLOGY, 14 human rights points, in PP 589/90, accusations against psychiatric treatments, PP 1137. Reform proposal, PP 7. – I have given up trying to get off their mailing list. A garbage can is close to my P.O. box. – J.Z.

SCOTT BADER COMMONWEALTH, Letters & Leaflets of 1984, of interest to those concerned with cooperative production, self-management, employee-shareholding, group contracting etc. 15 pp, honouring Ernest Bader, the founder, pages that were left around my place as “filler material” for all too many years, in PP 1420/22: 541.

SCOTT, OTTO, The Environmental Heresy, CHALCEDON REPORT, Nov. 89, 4pp, in PP 1,033. ( Since it is one of the few libertarian journals that now offers its back issues on fiche, I do no longer consider my selection of the libertarian interest articles among its mainly Christian articles, to be an urgent job. THE FREEMAN is another libertarian journal published by Christians. Have Christians seen the light (through microfiche reading machines) more so than atheist libertarians and anarchists have? Divine intervention? – J.Z.)

SCOTT, SIR WALTER, THOUGHTS ON THE PROPOSED CHANGE OF CURRENCY, & CROKER, JOHN WILSON, Two Letters on Scottish Affairs, with introduction by DAVID SIMPSON & ALASTAIR WOODS, 1972, IUP. No index, no bibliography, not even continuous page numbering! 272pp, in PP 1427: 1- 66 – IUP claims a copyright based upon its “original microfilms” of the original. With the same “reasoning” I could claim a “copyright” based on my original photocopies of their print and my hand-corrections of that copy! Original works of art, too! – Scott’s FOURTH letter on the subject has, apparently, never been published yet. I would have liked to see that one much more than some more comments by modern academics with no notions of monetary freedom or free banking. But we do have now some modern academic defences of the Scottish tradition of free banking, even though they are mostly not yet from the point of view of FULL monetary freedom. See also HERBERT SPENCER’S essays for an early defence of this tradition. I filmed Scott’s letters before – but included them here, once again, because some opposing points of view were added, however worthless they are from the libertarian & radical monetary freedom point of view. – All the relevant literature should be readily available to solve 2 of the major problems of our times: Mass unemployment, hitting over 1 billion people directly and inflation, wronging and harming all people on Earth. On their behalf, I am ready to ignore some fancy copyright claims for works not readily in print or accessible to most. How much the Irish University Microforms charges for its microfilm edition of this work is not mentioned in this print. – J.Z.

SCOTTISH INDEPENDENCE, See: GABB, SEAN, Why the English Should Welcome Scottish Independence, POLITICAL NOTES No. 139, 2pp: 89, in PP 1487. – No territorial national independence sets all individuals free. But, exterritorial and full independence for all Scotsmen, as Scotsmen (if that has meaning for them), wherever they happen to live and work! – PIOT, J.Z., 5.6.98.

SCOVILLE, JOHN W., A Program of Reform for the United States, an address, March 4, 1944, 29pp, in PP 1,020.

SCOVILLE, JOHN W., The Theory of Collective Bargaining, an address delivered before the Detroit Kiwanis Club, 12pp, 1944, with a 2pp excerpt of the above: Collective Bargaining Wrong in Principle, in PP 1,005 and in PP 1139.

SCROPE, G. POULETT, Principles of Political Economy, deduced from the Natural Laws of Social Welfare, and applied to the Present State of Britain, 1833, 1969, 481pp, in PP 1187. Somewhat for natural law and monetary freedom – but not consistently so. Microfilmed upon recommendation by Kurt Schuler. – J.Z.

SCRUTON, ROGER, The Insanity of Unilateral Disarmament, 1983, 4pp, LA Foreign Policy Perspectives No. 17, in PP 1,052 – 1,061. – Unilateral NUCLEAR disarmament of all governments – and of all private nuke fanatics – does make sense. The more enlightened people need suitable firearms, training & organization for this. – Nuclear devices are not suitable to resist or overthrow a dictatorship and to liberate its victims. Such a “cure” is even worse than the disease. – J.Z.

SCULLY, EDGAR, The Place of the State in Society according to Thomas Aquinas, THE THOMIST 46, July 81, 407-428, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1864, headed: Man’s End, Society & State in Aquinas.

SCUOTEGUAZZA, HENRY C., The Revolt Against Reason, 2pp, in PP 1249.

SEABERG, R.B., The Norman Conquest and the Common Law: The Levellers and the Argument from Continuity, THE HISTORICAL JOURNAL, England, 24, 4, 1981, 791-906, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1653, headed: Levellers: Historical Continuity & Rights.

SEADE, ESPERANZA DURAN DE, State and History in Hegel’s Concept of People, JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF IDEAS 40, July/Sep 79, 369-384, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p811, headed: People, Freedom, and State in Hegel.

SEAVER, BEN, The Gates Commission Report on an all Volunteer Armed Force, American Friends Service Committee, 1970, 4pp, in PP 1,0011.

SEAWATER AS SOIL NUTRIENT, IN MODERATE USE, PP 1000, 1028/29.

SEAWATER DESALINATION, ELECTROGRAVITATIONAL, 2pp, and use as soil nutrient, in moderation, to restore trace mineral balance, boost crop yields and pest resistance, 1p, in NOW WHAT, Nos. I & II, Fall 1987 & Spring 1989, published by Waves Forest, in PP 1,028/29. (Compare also Dr. Alain Bombard: The Bombard Story, Andre Deutsch, 1953, on the use of a plancton net and press to obtain food and drink at sea, in combination with SOME seawater. All not very tasteful but lifesaving. Dr. Bombard demonstrated this for 65 days, while crossing the Atlantic on a rubber raft. Such equipment and advice is, alas, still not standard equipment for survival at sea. How slow are large segments of the community to accept even proven and life-saving technologies? They seem to be more interested in accepting high tech golf clubs and tennis rackets. J.Z.)

SECESSION & CURRENCY, See: WALKER, MICHAEL, A currency for Quebec? 1p: 123, in PP 1515. – Why only one and not as many as the market will bear? – Territorial secessionism is not enough decentralization. Exterritorial autonomy is required for voluntary payment communities or independence from all central banks, that of Quebec included. – J.Z.

SECESSION UNITED, 2 leaflets, 2pp, of an all too secretive group, in PP 1,051. – I suspect their information offer, because of their secrecy and their lack of interest in my On Panarchy series. Who could honestly say that he is a know-it all in this new science of tolerance and freedom of action, based on exterritorial autonomy – which is based on individual secessionism and voluntary associationism? Some actions have to be kept secret in our times but hardly educational literature, espousing radical principles and speculating and proposing future options. To ask you in advance to promise not to pass it on or show it around, seems simply absurd to me. – J.Z.

SECESSION, GEOGRAPHICAL: See: HELMS, ANDREA R.C. & MCBEATH, GERALD A., A Cross-National Study of Statehood in Federal Systems, Executive Summary of a Report to the Alaska Statehood Commission, June 1981, 10pp, in PP 1310: 117-125. Sent to me by Tom Owens. Reproduced because it discusses at least geographical secession. If it had discussed voluntaristic and exterritorial autonomy then I would, probably, have filmed it long ago.

SEIZURE FEVER, PP 1151. This reminds of certain times of the decline of the Roman Empire and of the Red Terror of the French Revolution – apart from the War Communism in this century. The Inquisition and the early prosecution of Jews in Nazi Germany were also largely motivated by the property confiscations that were involved. Are communist anarchists applauding such seizures or are they simply silent about them? Or are they angry with the police as a competitor in attacks on property rights? – J.Z.

SEIZURES BY THE STATE, PP 679. See Inflation, Legal Tender, Taxation.

SEKHMET, Aotearoa, N.Z., Issue 6, Magazine of Anarcha-Feminist Federation of Aotearoa, N.Z., n.d., 20pp, in PP 1235. – The feminists have still to discover their micrographic options for themselves. They do not have to follow the examples set by the male paper tigers. – J.Z.

SELF-HELP BOOKS, PP 347-348 (Enterprise Publishing Co.) Since then there has been an enormous expansion of this kind of literature. A New York correspondent has 5,000 self-sufficiency books and is quadruplicating this private reference library, for himself and for his children, on jacket fiche, produced at home, at a materials cost of ca. 38 cents for the master and 5 cents for a duplicate. Sale of the books, at the end, should cover his costs. His example demonstrates, like that of LMP, what great services libertarians could supply to themselves, micrographically – if only they could be bothered. – J.Z.

SELF-MANAGEMENT, See: WOLF, ELIAS, Yugoslavia: Model of workers self-management? 3p: 23, in PP 1502. – Did they self-manage their economic activities any better than they managed, over the last few years, their political one? Living long under communism seems to have taught them coercion – and not much else. – J.Z., 5.6.98.

SELF-REGULATION, See: FOLEY, RIDGWAY K., Jr. The Myth of Self-Regulation, 9pp: 443, in PP 1529-33. – That applies to bureaucratic “self-regulation”, e.g. via “boards” etc. On the other hand, we have what Rose Wilder Lane regards as “self-control”, i.e., individual control of the own affairs, as the only control that really works. – J.Z., 13.11.98.

SELF-SUFFICIENCY? See: SEYMOUR, JOHN, Post-Industrial Self-Sufficiency (Whether We Like it or not), 7pp, in PP 1386/91: 841. – With much more industry or labour much less could be achieved! E.g.: The article depicts e.g. a woven washing basket, which costs hours of labour and which, in supermarkets, you can sometimes pick up for a dollar or two, when shaped in plastic. Human labour should not be wasted on minor items for living. Should one waste hours to days on producing a comb, like some Japanese craftsmen do? It is their right to do so, if they want to, and the right of their consumers to pay the exorbitant price for such craftsmanship. But it is not a solution for the masses of consumers. – J.Z., 24.2.97.

SELGIN, G.A., Free Banking in Foochow, n.d., 31pp, in PP 1186.

SELGIN, G.A., Prof., The Case for Free Banking: Then and Now, 1985, 15pp, in PP 1,000.

SELGIN, GEORGE, A., The Theory of Free Banking, Money Supply under Competitive Note Issue, reproduction of the book’s cover and cover notes only, with an introductory letter by David D. Boaz of the Cato Institute, and Kurt Schuler’s review, in PP 787.

SENNHOLZ, HANS F., Understanding Affirmative Action, 1p from CHALCEDON REPORT, 8/95. – CHALCEDON REPORT makes a copyrights claim but, as you can see, the author offers this article free of charge on line and on disk. – I consider Christianity, even that of some free market and anarchist Christians, to be and likely to remain a major obstacle to the realization of liberty, individual rights and, thereby, of peace, justice and prosperity on earth. Anyone still relying on a God will never achieve full self-enlightenment and self-liberation. And any movement that takes no clear stand e.g. for individual responsibility rather than collective responsibility, for resistance and tyrannicide and against excessive obedience to authorities and one that seems unable or unwilling to apply the principle of religious tolerance to the political, economic and social spheres, has still much to learn about liberty. Will it learn it, within another few thousand to a few hundred years? – J.Z.

SENNHOLZ, HANS F., Unemployment in Puerto Rico, 11pp: 407, in PP1529-33. – Hundreds of millions in the misery of unemployment in the world – and this although it could be abolished, within days, through the introduction and use of full monetary freedom. But so far there exists no ready channel and market for such truths. One cannot sell them at any price, least of all to the unemployed themselves, and not even to most anarchists and libertarians. -J.Z., 14.11.98.

SENNHOLZ, HANS, The Fateful 1980s, 3pp, in PP 1243/44. – How can one induce him and FEE, which he runs now, to make use of their microfiche options? How many FEE publications are now out of print, apart from THE FREEMAN, which is microfilmed by University Microfilm? How much would it cost FEE to get all this o.o.p. material onto microfiche? Someone with easy access to it should perhaps start with listing its o.o.p. material, at least all those titles not yet reproduced by LMP. I had only once the chance to visit FEE, in 1990 and may never get it again. – From my point of view it simply seems to sit on these treasures, like George the Dragon. And yet progress towards liberty via educational efforts is its main aim! – Why does it confine itself to print on paper, which has not achieved general enlightenment for 500 years? And why, otherwise, only lectures and seminars, which have not achieved it, either, many more centuries? – J.Z., 1995.

SENNOTT, CHARLES, Waco – a popular shrine for the military minded, 1p, in PP 1239. – As if only the military minded were interested in full religious and other liberties. – J.Z.

SENTIENT QUOTE LIST, The Words of the Sentient, a collection of pro-freedom quotes from the Internet, 115 pp, with a short bibliography, in PP 1537: 1-115. – It somewhat supplements my SLOGANS FOR LIBERTY encyclopaedic effort. Quotes from it have still to be included in my Slogans collection. – J.Z.

SEPARATISM: KONKIN, SAMUEL E., III, Separatism & Quebec, 2pp, in PP 1404/06: 293, 312, 332. – CHAMPLIN, ROBERT, Separatism and Quebec, A reply to Konkin, 1p: 312. Konkin’s reply, 1p: 332, in PP 1404/06. – The only just separatism is one that is voluntary for everyone concerned. That requires exterritorial separatism rather than a new territorial despotism by the local majority. – J.Z., 10.10.97.

SEPTIC TANK PROBLEMS SOLVED, 2pp on a labour & cost saving recycling approach, in PP 1,034. (I was forced to join the government’s sewage scheme, which cost me much in labour for digging a trench, for materials and in plumber’s connection charges and a high annual fee, about the equivalent of the own independent septic system that was installed before. – When a government offers to help you – run if you can! – J.Z.)

SERES, LASZLO, Hungary ’95 – A Statist “Modernization”, 1p, in PP 1287/89p461. – Nothing but a complete denationalization, as advocated e.g. in PP 19C, putting the assets into the hands of private citizens and cooperators, as a general refund to taxpayers, can assure the permanent success of privatization, through the expropriation of the bureaucracy, for the benefit of its former subjects. – J.Z.

SEYMOUR, JOHN, Post-Industrial Self-Sufficiency (Whether We Like it or not), 7pp, in PP 1386/91: 841. – With much more industry or labour much less could be achieved! E.g.: The article depicts e.g. a woven washing basket, which costs hours of labour and which, in supermarkets, you can sometimes pick up for a dollar or two, when shaped in plastic. Human labour should not be wasted on minor items for living. Should one waste hours to days on producing a comb, like some Japanese craftsmen do? It is their right to do so, if they want to, and the right of their consumers to pay the exorbitant price for such craftsmanship. But it is not a solution for the masses of consumers. – J.Z., 24.2.97.

SFORZA-RODERICK, MICHELLE & SCOTT, NOVA & WEISBRO, MARK, Writing the Constitution of a Single Global Economy, n.d., 9pp: 115, in PP 1495. – By of neo-protectionists against free trade, here named “global economy” or “globalism”. Without the artificial borders set up by territorial states, an economy, to stay economical, is always as global as is possible and useful. For the modern protectionists some governments are too much in favour of free trade and financial freedom, alas, only an economic freedom that is “regulated” by international “agreements” between governments rather than between producers, traders and their customers. To confine the economy via constitutions, laws, regulations, jurisdictions, international treaties to A household, A street, village, town, district, region, country, federation or continent, is simply wrong and absurd. ALL governments should simply leave it alone, completely. It does not require any government aid or restrictions but simply complete absence of territorial governmentalism. Then the economy would automatically be as centralized and as decentralized as is desirable in particular spheres. Unilateral renunciation of economic restrictions by the own side would be easier, quite practicable and ultimately help more to spread the introduction of fully free trade and full monetary and financial freedom everywhere than international treaties possibly could. – I do regret that many anarchists and libertarians seem to have fallen for such camouflage terms and “arguments”. – J.Z.

SHAEFER, DAVID L., Montaigne’s Political Skepticism, POLITY: The Journal of the Northeastern Political Science Association, 11, Sum. 79, 512-541, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p, headed: Montaigne and the Value of Tolerance.

SHAFFER, BUTLER D., Personal Declaration of Principles, 1966, contains a monetary freedom clause and is thus included, at 29x, in PP 586/587. For its Human Rights Code it is also included at 48x, in PP 589/590. It is also contained in “Innovator”. 6/1966.

SHAFFER, BUTLER D., Some Freedom Writings, reviewed by John Zube, 1998, 62pp, in PP 1539: 1 –62. – Titles reviewed: a) Who Authorizes the Authorities? 3pp, in PP 1020. One of his weekly columns in THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER. Anthologized in L.K. Samuels, Facets of Liberty, 1985, fiched in PP 1020. b) Violence as a Product of Imposed Order, HIS, 1976, 43pp, in PP 1114. c) Calculated Chaos, Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival, Alchemy Books, 717 Market St., # 514, San Francisco, Cal., 94103, 2nd. Printing, 1987, 344pp. – Not yet included in the PP series. The author gave me a review copy but not yet the o.k. to microfiche it. So I did, finally, years after, do the next best thing, for my purposes, by reviewing it at some length. Its arguments are important for the On PANARCHY discussion. d) The Shaffer Dictionary, 1p, in PP 369. e) Personal Declaration of Principles, 1966, in PP 586 –587 (monetary freedom interest) & in PP 589 & 590 (as human rights declaration) and in INNOVATOR, 6/1966, reproduced in PP 592-594. – I have liked all of the few writings of his that have come my way and wish I had a complete collection of them. Then I would, probably, want to microfiche the lot. – Maybe he will do it himself one day or another of his fans will do so. As a professor and writer in print on paper, he is somewhat in the lime light but, nevertheless, his excellent libertarian writings are, nevertheless, still all too little known and appreciated in the freedom movement. – J.Z., 9.2. 1999.

SHAFFER, BUTLER D., The Shaffer Dictionary, 1p, 36x, in PP 369.

SHAFFER, BUTLER D., The Social Responsibility of Business: A Dissent, BUSINESS AND SOCIETY, published by Roosevelt University, 17, 1977, 11-18, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1199p101. Headed: Business’ Social Ethics.

SHAFFER, BUTLER D., Who Authorizes the Authorities? 3pp, in PP 1,020. I would like to see much more of this excellent author in microfilm, even though I do not agree with the main thesis of his recent book length and indiscriminate attack on all kinds of organizations, without distinguishing between coercive and monopolistic and territorial ones and voluntaristic, competitive and exterritorial ones. He gave me a copy in 1990 but was and may be still hesitant about filming permission. I would now want to film it only with some of my criticism of this aspect. This book is: “Calculated Chaos, Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival”, Alchemy Books, 717 Market St. No. 514, S.F., Cal. 94 103. 1985, 2nd. printing 1987.

SHAH, SALEEM A., Dangerousness: A Paradigm for Exploring Some Issues in Law and Psychology, AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIS 33, 1978, 224-238, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p398, headed: The Danger of “Dangerousness”.

SHAKERS, See: HENDERSON, LOUIS K., The Story of the Shakers. The Facts about the Most Fantastic Church in America, 1945, 24pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, no series no., in PP 1219.

SHANLEY, MARY L., Marriage Contract and Social Contract in Seventeenth Century English Political Though, WESTERN POLITICAL QUARTERLY 32, March 79, 79-91, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p689, headed: Locke, Women, and Freedom. – Discussed as if only one form of contract would be possible and desirable in both cases, in whole territories. The arguments would have largely disappeared under fully free choice and competition in both cases. Alas, we haven’t even got free choice in marriage contracts yet – and every few years another kind of marriage and family law is imposed from above. – J.Z.

SHARP, GRANVILLE, A General Militia, Acting by Well-Regulated Rotation, Is the Only Safe Means of Defending a Free People, 1781, 29x, in PP 356.

SHARP, GRANVILLE, Hints of Some General Principles which May Be Useful to Military Associations, 1781, 29x, in PP 356. (All 4 under Sharp : Tracts…)

SHARP, GRANVILLE, Life & Work, PP 243, 915.

SHARP, GRANVILLE, Remarks Concerning the Trained Bands of the City of London. – With an Addition, Concerning the Militia-Laws for London, 1781, 29x, in PP 356.

SHARP, GRANVILLE, The Ancient Common-Law Right of Associating with the Vicinage, in every Country, District, or Town, to Support the Civil Magistrate in Maintaining the Peace, 1781, 29x, in PP 356.

SHARP, GRANVILLE, Tracts Concerning the Ancient and only True Legal Means of National Defence, by a Free Militia, 1781, publishes the 4 tracts listed above together, on 14pp, 29x, in PP 356.

SHARP, MICHAEL & CATALANO, ANITA, Migrants, the facts behind the faces. Australians at work: why high immigration is good for us, 2pp, SMH 11.10.93, in PP 1366: 120. – LMP would like hints towards all free migration articles, leaflets, papers and books, especially when they defend it as an individual right. I assert that immigrants have also the right not to integrate, if they do not want to, and, instead, to become or remain exterritorially independent, together with other and like-minded volunteers, in their own communities, not claiming any exclusive territories for themselves, their own private or cooperative properties excepted. – J.Z.

SHARPE, JOHN, The True Political Economy – compared with some current doctrines, 1945, 35pp, 29x, in PP 356 & 411.

SHAW, GEORGE BERNARD, Anarchism versus State Socialism, 1889, reproduced from “Minus One”, 28.8.1971, a short article which Shaw wanted people to ignore, forget or interpret otherwise & which is not included in his collected works, 29x, in PP 537.

SHAW, GEORGE BERNARD, The Impossibilities of Anarchism, 35pp, 1909, a socialist view, 36x, in PP 340. There are 3 all too short references in his still widely available: Everybody’s Political What’s What. And his “Man and Superman” is showing some anarchist traits. On some of the difficulties and impracticabilities of communist anarchism he was, probably, more realistic than most communist anarchists. – J.Z.

SHEA, ROBERT J., The Martin Gardner Challenge, 1987 (& before), 6pp, on how anarchists would counter crime, in PP 1371/72: 201, with 5pp of discussions: 224.

SHEA, ROBERT J., Your Name Is in here Somewhere, written for GOLDEN APA No. 45, 12pp, in PP 1369/70: 261.

SHEA, ROBERT, Abolish Obscenity Laws, part of a speech, 1p, date? source? In PP 1279. – The obscenity laws are the only and real obscenity, in the sphere of censorship – except when practised only among volunteers and for or against them. – J.Z.

SHEA, ROBERT, Defining Anarchism, 4pp, writing as J. Stewart, advocate of the ANTI-Christ, in PP 479. – Alas, I found Bob Shea’s obituary in TC 197 of 13 May 94. Life extention comes too late for many of my kind of “old guard”, who did not bet their scarce resources on becoming successfully frozen and unfrozen again. Some think this is the only bet worth having, but I still rather bet on the acceptance of freedom ideas, like e.g. microfiche self-publishing, no matter what the odds. If microfiche were fully used to publicise longevity research, longevity might arrive much sooner. – This is an option that most longevity advocates are blind to. – J.Z.

SHEA, ROBERT, Introduction to “Law and Disorder”, on the Chicago Convention and its afermath, 1968, 1p, in PP 1280.

SHEA, ROBERT, Invitation Notes, 1971, 5pp, in PP 1298.

SHEA, ROBERT, Morality Is not Good for you. “Everything I like is either illegal, immoral or fattening”. Writing as Alexander Eulenspiegel, in TEENSET, V/3, March 69, 2pp, in PP 1279. – The index of T. lists it as: “The New Morality. It may be just the absence of the old morality”.

SHEA, ROBERT, Must Tax-Refusers Be Masochists? Can Tax-Resisters Become An-Archists? 1p, in PP 479.

SHEA, ROBERT, Mysticism Demystified, Mysticism from a Western Point of View, 1979, 4pp, in PP 1280.

SHEA, ROBERT, No Morality at all! 1p, written under the name Alexander Eulenspiegel, in PP 1279.

SHEA, ROBERT, Obscenity Laws and the First Amendment, 1978, 2pp, in PP 479.

SHEA, ROBERT, Patterns of Anarchy, n.d., 5pp, in PP 1280. (Might be written by R.A. Wilson, instead. An attempt to classify the various anarchist movements.)

SHENFIELD, ARTHUR, The Role of Ideas in Human Affairs, n.d., 11pp, in PP 897.

SHENFIELD, ARTHUR, Trial by Taxation, 19pp, 41, in PP 1450.

SHENFIELD, ARTHUR, What Right to Strike? Here only a 2pp summary by the IEA of this Hobart Paper 106, in PP 1140. (As far as I know, the IEA has still not managed the microeconomics of microfiching all its o.o.p. output. Nor has it answered my submission. Such large think tanks develop a bureaucracy, personality squabbles and party strife and wastefulness and conservatism of their own, largely supported by charitable sponsorship. Most are even harder to win over to the use of innovative technologies and their savings than individuals are. And when they do use them, then they may price them prohibitively, like the Heritage Foundation does. Upon evidence of such lack of common sense, I do not trust them much in other respects, either. Their biggest sponsors want only “moderate” reforms – and will not be sufficiently educated by them. – J.Z.

SHIRLEY, CECIL, Fetters on Freedom, The Story of Prohibition in America, 1920, 53pp, 29x, in PP 415.

SHKLAR, JUDITH N., Jean d’Alembert and the Rehabilitation of History, JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF IDEAS 42, Oct/Dec. 81, 643-664, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1656, headed: History: The Master “Science” of Human Knowledge.

SHOPPING HOURS, PP 199. At least in this respect some breakthroughs have been achieved in recent years in Australia and Canada. I was glad to find some photocopy shops in the US open for 24 hours, with special copy prices for unpopular periods. – J.Z.

SHULIM JOSEPH I, The Continuing Controversy over the Etiology and Nature of the French Revolution, CANADIAN JOURNAL OF HISTORY 16, Dec. 81, 357-378, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1882, headed: Marxist Historiography & the French Revolution.

SHULL, THOMAS A., Ohio Should Heed Public Policy Advice, 1990, 3pp, on the book of the Heartland Institute: Coming Out of the Ice. Heartland Institute, in PP 1105.

SHULTZ, RICHARD, Breaking the Will of the Enemy during the Vietnam War: The Operationalization of the Cost-Benefit Model of Counterinsurgency Warfare, JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH 15, 1978, 109-129, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p803, headed: Vietnam: Cost-Benefit Warfare.

SHUTE, NEVIL, In the Wet, 9pp extract, where he discusses democracy and an alternative voting system, where multiple votes have to be earned. With a 1p comment by J.Z., 5.5.96, in PP 1323: 63. But he does not grant the decisive vote, the individual secessionist one, either. – J.Z., 9/97.

SIEGAN, BERNARD, Land Use Without Zoning, review by DAVIS KELLER, 1p: 31, in PP 1468.

SIEGEL, BARRY, Austria Comes to Oregon, 4pp, in PP 1268. On Mises.

SIEGEL, STEPHEN A., The Aristotelian Basis of English Law, 1450-1800, N.Y.U. LAW REVIEW 56, April 81, 18-59, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1643, headed: The Transformation of English Common Law.

SILVER & GOLD, Concurrent Circulation, PP 237/38. (With legal tender this would be Bimetallism, with all its inevitable problems. Without it we would have the market solution of parallel and optional currencies. – J.Z.)

SILVER AGITATION, THE FOLLY OF, PP 1111. See also: SOUND CURRENCY.

SILVER I.O.U. SYSTEM, PP 617.

SILVER PRICES & COINAGE, PP 1111.

SILVER STANDARDS, PP 373 – 375, 1028/29.

SILVER, ISIDORE, Self-Image of a ‘Natural Aristocracy’: What Flows from Neo-Conservatism, THE NATION 225, 1977, 44-51, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1199p54. Headed: Order and Elites.

SIMIS, KONSTANTIN M., U.S.S.R.: The Corrupt Society (The Secret Capitalists), review by JIM DOWNARD, 1pp: 23, in PP 1479. – As usual, already in the title, “society” gets the blame for consequences of the State’s interventionism. Jim points out that in the Russian black market violators get rapidly and almost completely excluded from doing business. – J.Z.

SIMIS, KONSTANTIN M., USSR: The Corrupt Society, Simon &Schuster, N.Y., 1982, 316pp, 2pp review only, by BETTINA BIENGREAVES: 412, in PP 1529-33. – It was a corrupt STATE. Free societies can still not freely develop in the areas of the former Soviet Empire. – J.Z., 14.11.98.

SIMON, HELENE, Robert Owen. Sein Leben und seine Bedeutung fuer die Gegenwart, 1905, 1925, 338 S., in PP 1403: 1. – An intelligent reader should be able to ignore the socialist bias of the author. Among other things, R.O. experimented with new management, new education, productive cooperative and monetary freedom ideas. As a pioneer in these fields he did get many things wrong but, basically, he was a voluntarist and experimentalist and the patient pursuit of voluntaristic experiments, based on full individual sovereignty, which requires exterritorial autonomy, would gradually have supplied all the correct answers required. Owen can hardly be blamed for what some of the totalitarian socialists made of his teachings. Robert Owen would never have “liquidated” an opponent, except by better arguments & practices. – PIOT, J.Z., 28.2.97.

SIMON, WILLIAM E., A Time for Truth, review only: PP 631. – If I were publisher or author of a modern freedom title, then I would want a portable and very cheap issue of it too, one on microfiche, issued at the same time, so that it would have a chance to become part of a PORTABLE library on liberty and, potentially, to reach a much larger audience. – J.Z.

SIMON, WILLIAM E., Government Regulation: Only the Big Survive, 1980, 4pp, in PP 935.

SIMONS, HENRY C., A Positive Program for Laissez Faire, Some Proposals for a Liberal Economic Policy, Public Policy Pamphlet No. 15, The University of Chicago Press, 1934, 1947, 37pp, in PP 1,019. (They are reproduced here largely only because of their misleading title. Permeated by modern liberal and statist meddling ideas rather than genuine L.F. ideas. I don’t think you will want to buy the printed book after glancing through this hash on fiche. J.Z.)

SIMONS, MARLISE, Soviet Troops Guinea Pigs in A-Bomb Blasts, 1993, 1p clipping, in PP 1142. Australian rulers similarly experimented with their troops – merely lesser numbers of them. And Aborigines were not kept out of the test areas, either. And according to our press, radiation experiments were undertaken without knowledge and consent of the victims, in the U.S., in about a thousand cases. The government is your enemy, not your friend and protector. Maybe that is why only ca. 33% of the Russian voters bothered to vote, recently, – J.Z.

SINCLAIR, STANLEY, Reform for our Time, Centre for Land Economics, N.Y.C., 1972, 73pp, in PP 1205.

SINCLAIR, UPTON, A Giant’s Strength. A Three-Act Drama of the Atomic Bomb, 1948, 52pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-666, in PP 1219. – After 52 years of trying to learn English, I still think it should be rather “on” or “about” the Atomic Bomb. – J.Z.

SINCLAIR, UPTON, Boston, A Novel. The inside story of the life and death of Sacco and Vanzetti, and a picture of the civilization which put them to death. ONLY VOL. I, 1928, 195pp. Vol. II not on hand. One biography, which I saw in Michael Green’s library in L.A., listed hundreds of references on the S & V case. – J.Z.

SINCLAIR, UPTON, No Parasan. (They Shall Not Pass.) A Story of the Battle of Madrid, n.d., 94pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-544, in PP 1219.

SINGLE TAX, See: BULLOCK, EDNA D., Selected Articles on the Single Tax, 280pp, in PP 1265.

SINGLE TAX, See: JORGENSEN, EMIL O., Did Henry George Confuse the Single Tax? A Re-examination of the Fundamental Principles upon which Henry George’s PROGRESS AND POVERTY Is Based, 1936, 98pp, indexed, in PP 1267.

SINGLETON, JOHN & ROBERT HOWARD, Rip Van Australia, here only in a 3pp review, by Michael Baume, in QUADRANT, 36x, in PP 418-419, p.203. One of the A – Z freedom books that I would like to see integrated with all other such titles, into the beginnings of a libertarian encyclopaedia. – J.Z.

SKILLMAN, PENNY, Review, 1p, of A Vindication of the Rights of Whores, ed. by Gail Pheterson, 1989, 293pp, in PP 1171.

SKIN CANCER: DAYTON, LEIGH, Ray of Hope for Skin Cancer Cure, 96, 1p, in PP 1418: 125. On a genetically engineered vaccine against melanoma. – I have my doubts about genetic decision-making being exclusively in the hands of governments, large corporations or scientists. All their offers should amount to no more than more free choices for self-responsible individuals. – J.Z., 3.10.97.

SKINNER, QUENTIN, The Origins of the Calvinist Theory of Revolution, in: After the Reformation: Essays in Honor of J.H. Hexter, Philadelphia, U. of Pennsylvania P., 1980, 307-330, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1654, headed: Scholastic Origins of Popular Resistance Theory.

SKIRDA, A., Hace 50 anos murio NESTOR MAJNO, 2pp: 77, in PP 1494.

SKIRMISH POLITICS, PP 516.

SKJELSBAEK, KJELL, Militarism, its Dimensions and Corollaries: An Attempt at Conceptual Clarification, JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH 16, No. 3, 1979, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p1110, headed: An Anatomy of Militarism.

SKOUSEN, JOEL M., Essential Principles for the Conservation of Liberty, Madison, Ohio, 1984, 76pp, with a 2pp letter by the author to Jack Sanders, x-mas 1984. In PP 1,020. – I hold this to be a very thoughtful, important and innovative book, deserving closer study. It contains an interesting human rights draft, not yet included in my anthology, and individual secessionist ideas, on pp 49ff. He calls them “covenant societies”. I object mainly only to his remaining theological premises and limited government notions, based on a belief in “national issues”. He favours a limited form of monetary freedom. All in all a very positive contribution and I am proud that I can include 2 such in one microfiche. The other is Facets of Liberty, ed. by L.K. Samuels. – J.Z.

SKRECKY, DOUGLAS, Autolysis. (Process of self-destruction, due to cellular enzymes being activated after severe anoxia, which then “digests” cellular structure.), describing a major Cryonics problem, 3pp: 36, in PP 1292.

SLAVERY, see GRIMKE, ARCHIBALD H., William Lloyd Garrison, The Abolitionist, 1891, indexed, 405pp, in PP 1071. – All or almost all of the U.S. anti-slavery literature has been microfilmed in at least one special collection, by one of the other microfilm publishers. – J.Z.

SLOGANS FOR LIBERTY, Vol. I, Abandon – Axioms. Includes Aphorisms, Proverbs, Quotes, Definitions, Explanations, Corrections and Comments, compiled and commented upon by John Zube, especially from 1973-93, 210pp, in PP 1,050. Volumes II – IV, July 94, 630 pp, Bachelors – Democracy, in PP 1179 – 1181. – (The other volumes will be published by and by, when I get around to keyboard or scan them in. Help is welcomed.)

SMITH, ADAM, PP 569, 602, 620, 735, 935, 1012, 1102, 1146. – Altogether there are probably hundreds of references to him in this series. His whole library has also been microfilmed by someone. I would like to see a special edition of his works, on microfiche, which would include all the valid additions, comments and criticism to his writings that have so far appeared. Microfiche would have space for them. – J.Z.

SMITH, JAMES CHARLES, Book Review of Morton J. Horwitz’s The Transformation of American Law, 1780-1860, WISCONSIN LAW REVIEW 4, 1977, 1253-1276, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p586, headed: Horwitz: Law and Economic Interests.

SMITH, JEFFERY J., We, the Landlord… An Alternative to Land Abuse, 3pp: 31, in PP 1505.

SMITH, KENNETH, Landlords lose lease on life as rent control ruins them, 1990, 2pp, on William Tucker, The Excluded Americans, Homelessness…, CATO CLIPPINGS, in PP 1139.

SMITH, L, NEIL, A New Covenant, LI edition, 1p: 131, in PP 1481.

SMITH, L. NEIL, Publications, 2pp, in PP1534: 114.

SMITH, L. NEIL, A Call to Arms, 2pp, in PP 1279.

SMITH, L. NEIL, A Covenant, 1p: 122, in PP 1471.

SMITH, L. NEIL, A New Covenant, 1p, from his book THE GALLATIN DIVERGENCE, in PP 1420/22: 252. – If treated as being already the best possible libertarian covenant and as such to be accepted quite uncritically, without any changes, then it can never become that. It will then remain merely one of the best attempts in that direction. – Even if this libertarian SF writer and his supporters are unwilling to discuss drafts of further improvements, PEACE PLANS would always have many pages to spare for such attempts. – PIOT, J.Z., 10.9.97.

SMITH, L. NEIL, A NEW COVENANT, Libertarian International Edition, 1p. – I do seek further improvements upon this version, for fiching. – J.Z. In PP 1512: 67. Also: 1p: 869, in PP 1508/09.

SNEED, JOHN D., Order Without Law: Where Will Anarchists Keep the Madmen? JLS, I/2, 8pp, in PP 1,051. (Hopefully, one day all such articles will find their way into my collection or into that of a micrographic network. So far, some such articles, on panarchistic or monetary freedom subjects, were not yet published by me because filming permission was expressly withheld, since the authors still hope to get them published in recognized scholarly journals. Alas, even there, if accepted, they will largely become buried, for most of the people, most of the time and in most places, or obtainable only at all too high prices. Authors ought to establish their own micrographic manuscript dumping and retrieval centre, that already sells some fiched copies upon demand, while the lot is offered by them or their agents to the other markets. It would also be easier and cheaper to circularize a few fiche than photocopied texts, e.g. among friends and associates, for their comments. – J.Z.)

SOCIAL INVENTIONS, Journal of the INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL INVENTIONS, London, No. 8, special issue on measuring quality of life, with some leaflets, 70pp, 29x, in PP 691, No. 9, 58pp, 29x, in PP 729, Nos. 10-15, 274pp, 42x, in PP 853. Nos. 16-18, 147pp, 36x, in PP 924. See also under INSTITUTE F.S.I.

SOCIAL INVENTIONS, Journal of the Institute for Social Inventions, Nos. 19, 1990 to No. 28, 1993, ISSN 0954-2606X, with some leaflets and some correspondence, 630pp, in 3 microfiche: PP 1260 – 1262. Nos. 29 – 30 appeared only in bookform: SOCIAL INVENTIONS, with the equivalent to Nos. 31 – 33, entitled: RE-INVENTING SOCIETY, in PP 1263.

SOCIALISM, see SCHOFIELD, WILLIAM, The Impossibility of Socialism, London, 1907, Liberty & Property Defence League, 15pp, in PP 980. (I would gladly reproduce all their output – if I could get hold of it. – J.Z.)

SOCIALISM, See: MALLOCK, W.H., The So-Called Evolution of Socialism: I. Socialists on the Evolution of Socialism: 274; II. The alleged contemporary Evolution of Socialism an Appearance only, not a Reality: 278; III. Misconception by the Socialists of the Natur of Industrial Evolution generally: 286; IV. The True Significance of Contemporary Industrial Evolution: 295, in PP 1499.

SOCIALISM, See: MAURICE, CHARLES & PEJOVICH, STEVE, Socialism: The Road to Decay, 1984, 2pp: 85, in PP 1469. – When “State Socialism” is meant, it should be stated as such. Voluntary socialism of the ideological rather than business kind, does harm and infringes the economic rights only of the voluntary participants. They deserve no better until they learn from their experiences. For some samples of successful “free market socialism” or “capitalistic socialism”, see under coops, partnerships, self-management, liberation at work, organization development, autonomous work groups, etc. Profit sharing should, naturally, be combined with loss-sharing as well. – J.Z.

SOCIALISM, See: SPENCER, JAMES, The Heresy of Socialism, 95, 2pp, in PP 1334/35: 189. – Socialism embraces dozens of different “heresies”. Some forms of it are voluntary, capitalistic and entrepreneurial. One should not equate them with territorial, totalitarian or State socialism. – J.Z., 30.9.97.

SOCIALISM, WHY DO THEY TURN TO IT? PP 1012. (There are hundreds of types. I am only opposed to the coercive and monopolistic forms and favour certain voluntary and cooperative forms, which come close to ideal forms of capitalism. – J.Z.)

SOCIETY & ITS SERVICES. Why the Henry George Idea Does not Prevail, PP 1003.

SOCIETY & THE STATE: MORLEY, FELIX, State and Society, IHS, 1978, 26pp, in PP 1424: 118. – This is from chapter 5 of his 1949 book: “The Power in the People”. – Frank Chodorov wrote a book on State and Society: “The Rise and Fall of Society”, The Devin-Adair Co., 1959, 168pp. After many years of book searching in bookshops, I did finally manage to get a copy of it. To me it seems to be a classic work on the subject & I extracted many “slogans for liberty” from it. I would like to reproduce that, too, if I could get the reproduction permission. Alas, according to some correspondence with this publisher, even they seem to be in some doubt about whether some of their titles are o.o.p. or not. Some were asserted to be in print still, although they were not listed in their literature list. Moreover, as usual, they are not prepared to bring out their o.o.p. titles on microfiche or allow others to do so. – What can the cause of freedom do with such friends? – J.Z., 11.9.97.

SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF NUTRITIONAL THERAPY, 1p flyer, in PP 1,052 – 1,061. For food supplements, like vitamin and multi-mineral pills, now also under threat of regulation. Next you might get prescribed diets and exercises, rest periods & clothing, because the monopoly decision-makers think it would be good for you. Do the “fat cats” give you the impression that they know what it good for themselves? And even if they were e.g. teetotallers and vegetarians, like Hitler supposedly was, would that make it safe to have them as rulers over us? – J.Z.

SOCIETY, See: MEEK, NIGEL, Society Does Not Exist (and if it Did it Shouldn’t), 4pp, Political Notes No. 144: 93, in PP 1516. – I hold that only voluntaristic and exterritorially autonomous societies deserve the name “societies” and communities and that territorial States ought not to exist but dissolved, as threats to freedom, justice, peace, progress and prosperity. – PIOT,J.Z., 10.11.98.

SOLDATOV, SERGEI, Sergei Soldatov Speaks (Anti-Soviet Society),2pp, 29x, in PP 698. Alas, the anti-soviet forces in Russia remained intellectually woefully unprepared for liberty and were and are insufficiently advised from the West. Thus the hardliner, never sufficiently unseated, might one day get full control again. Full exterritorial autonomy (except for military weapons and organizations) for the remaining hardliners – and for all middle-of-the-roaders and for all dissenting groups! Most urgently, all of them need some education on and practice of monetary freedom. Otherwise, galloping inflation will have its usual despotic effects. – J.Z., 9 Jan. 94.

SOLDIERS AS PEACE WORKERS, The Involuntary Soldiers Could be the most Important Peace Workers, 1966, PP 7, 650. See: Desertion, Military Jiu Jitsu, Prisoners of War, Military Insurrections, Militia, Decision on War and Peace.

SOLIDARNOSC, 2pp leaflet by NSZZ “Solidarnnosc”, Information Bureau in Australia and a sample of its 4pp NEWS on Polish Solidarity movement, 29 Feb. 86, in PP 851. (Movement leaflets are so numerous and often inaccessible that it would need a special effort to collect them all and microfilm them fast for those interested. – J.Z.)

SOLNEMAN, K.H.Z., Brot genug fuer Alle! 1946, 26pp. (On efficiently growing the grain required for oneself on a small patch of leased land, with a few hours of work, using the transplant method. By someone who has never done any gardening! – J.Z.) In PP 377.

SOLNEMAN, K.H.Z., Der Weltverband der Staatenlosen und Du! 1946, 19pp, together with notes and clippings related to the above project, in German and English and comments rather in favour of a protege citizenship with Haiti, at least for a start, 14pp, 29x, in PP 388.

SOLNEMAN, K.H.Z., The Manifesto of Peace and Freedom, The Alternative to the Communist Manifesto, 1983, 245 S., in PP 1324: 1. Mackay Gesellschaft, Mackay Society, printed version, without notes by John Zube. Translated by Doris Pfaff and John Zube. It won the first Alternative Peace Price at the Alternative Book Fair in Frankfurt/M, 1977. See: ZUBE, KURT HELMUT, MACKAY GESELLSCHAFT.

SOLZHENITSYN, ALEXANDER, See: DOUGLAS, GEORGE H., Alexsandr Solzhenitsyn, Some Lessons for Americans, 12pp: 177, in PP 1529-33. – Some of these titles have already been included in the updated main list. But by listing these additions separately you can save yourself browsing through all entries of the main list.

SOLZHENITSYN, ALEXANDER, The West’s Decline in Courage, WSJ, June 13, 1978, 2pp, in PP 1,019. (Much more than courage is missing. A.S. has not got a worthwhile program, either. But his descriptions of the Soviet’s totalitarian regime are excellent and may have significantly contributed to its downfall. – J.Z.)

SOMERSET, GLANVILLE, The Modesty of Lawyers, 1p, in PP 1336 – 39: 73. – He wrote many more satires in this magazine but I didn’t list them. Did I overlook any positive idea in them? That would have been unintentional. – J.Z.

SOMETHING FOR NOTHING: MAUS, F.L., The Curse of Something for Nothing, 3pp, in PP 1418: 7.

SONNENSCHEIN, W.T.S., Ed. of 5th ed. of: PROS & CONS, 1911-1912, A Guide to the Leading Controversies of the Day, by John Bertram Askew, 5th ed., largely re-written by W.T.S. Sonnenschein, indexed, 284pp, in PP 852. (Most of the questions raised and discussed then and there are still unsettled today! J.Z.)

SOUCHY, AUGUSTINE, Rudolf Rocker and Social Democracy in Germany, 2pp., in PP 1401.

SOUCHY, AUGUSTINE, The Red Army & the Russian Revolution, 3pp: 117; & Role of the Soviets in the Russian Revolution, 2pp: 135,in PP 1525. – Both from his 1922 booklet: The Workers and Peasants of Russia – How they Live. – He might have added: “and are murdered!” – J.Z.

SOULE, EVAN R., Jr., The European Scene, 2pp, 1971, with addresses of international libertarians: 559, in PP 1457/62.

SOUND CURRENCY, 1896, by Reform Club Sound Currency Committee, 1896, A Compendium of Accurate and Timely Information on Currency Questions, intended for Writers, Speakers and Students, 628pp, indexed, 24x, in PP 350-354. (This work is so rich and large in contents, especially in its material critical of forced paper currencies and legal tender, that I will not attempt to specify it here, especially since its own abstract, in 30pp of close print, has been reproduced in the Peace Plans Nos. 760-765, PP by Nos. listing. (Sheets 198-227.) Unfortunately, the print is very small and imperfect and a good photocopier at the Berlin Staatsbibliothek could not make up for this defect. If any monetary freedom advocate has access to a good scanner and to a laser printer, then this text is a worthwhile task for automatic transcription, even if this means an easily legible print-out of ca. 1500-3000pp. I intend to film this work again, reformatted, from better and enlarged photocopies that I have made. Also the 1895 issue which is on hand. Most of its issues are available on roll film for ca. $ 50. – I intend to transcribe some of these articles for filming in this series – if and when I get around to do this. -J.Z.)

SOUTHERN LIBERTARIAN MESSENGER, THE, 1989 – 1994, incomplete, & Oct. 72, 243pp, published & edited by John T. Harlee, in PP 1343/44: 1823-2065. – ISSUES: XVIII/1 – 9 (Jan. 90); XIX/5 (Sep. 90) – 12 (Apr.91); XX/1 – 5 (May – Sep. 91); XXI/8 (Dec. 92); Special Notice, 1993, Special Notice, 1994; I/6 (Oct.72); with some special leaflets, inserts and book club notes. – All of the latter have not yet been received or reproduced by me. He was one of the few who offered, through his book club, libertarian books second-hand, by mail order. His comments were often biting to amusing and should and could be used towards the compilation of a complete freedom bibliography, to make it more pleasant to peruse. – Help is needed, especially after John T. Harlee’s death, to get this whole compilation finally complete. Libertarian humour is so rare that all of it should become easily accessible. And his clippings and facts snippets, quotes and references are often informative and helpful, too. – But the print quality of some early issues is so bad that I would prefer it if someone scanned them and corrected the faults first, before submitting them to me for microfiching or using them himself in this way. – If someone else went to the trouble of fully indexing this journal, I would gladly microfiche this index, too. – John T. Harlees efforts for liberty deserve to be fully preserved and to become cheaply accessible, all over the world, at least on microfiche. We owe him and ourselves at least that much. – According to a clipped address, reproduced on sheet 1840, all of THE SOUTHERN LIBERTARIAN MESSENGER M A Y be available through UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS INTERNATIONAL. I cannot confirm this by any of the microfilm guides in my possession. Maybe he only wanted to point out the existence of this service by reproducing its standard notice: “This publication is available in microform. – University Microfilms International, 300 North Zeeb Road, Dept. P.R., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48 106, USA & 30-32 Mortimer Street, Dept. P.R., London, WIN 7RA, England.” – Anyhow, get some of their numerous catalogues and become surprised by the quantity of titles available already in this format, by this firm alone. However, they are pricey! For a dissertation they charge e.g. as much as it would cost them to get it filmed, although a duplicate costs only a fraction of the filming of the original. – On the same page Harlee had a short notice on my efforts. But it seems that he recognized only “the library of freedom” effort and the “storage economy” involved, not the cheap self-publishing option.

SOUTHERN LIBERTARIAN REVIEW, Arlington, ed. by Eric Scott Royce, 356pp, in PP 1404/06: 3. – I/1, Aug. 74, I/2 of Aug. 74, I/2 of Sep. 74, I/3, Oct. 74, – I/12, June 75, II/1, July 75 – II/12, Sep. 76, III/1, Oct. 76 – III/7, April 78 = last issue. This is one of the rare cases where I could get a set of a libertarian periodical complete. Once a few hundred participate, via their own independent libertarian microfiche publishing, it would be much easier – and completeness of libertarian publishing could be achieved by them. Note, I never attempt to list ALL the contents, all minor entries and contributions, but only have the intention, time and energy to list whatever contributions I think to be of some significance for the general freedom debate. Maybe one day someone else will scan in and automatically index everything. I would welcome that. – My thanks go to Michael E. Coughlin, publisher of THE DANDELION, for making his set of SLR available to me for photocopying.

SOVIET GOVERNMENT, documents, 1917-1929, as published by Martin Lawrence Ltd., London, and introduced by Henri Barbusse, here only those relating to the one-sided peace declaration by the Soviet delegate, on pages 23-41 in PP 878. – A perhaps unique precedent for a strategy that might be pursued in a better cause. – J.Z.

SOVIET PERSPECTIVES, IFF, I/2-5, April 91 – Sep. 91 & Soviet Perspectives, Special Report, October 1991, 43pp, in PP 1,002. – Not what IS happening there but what OUGHT and COULD happen there, should be published much more. So much remains to be done to release all creative energies, there, too. – J.Z.

SOWELL, THOMAS, Government and Minorities: A Reduction of Options, 1981, 3pp, in PP 1538: 16.

SOWELL, THOMAS, Markets and Minorities, 1981, 5pp, in PP 1538: 37. – Allow minorities to try to apply among themselves any economic, political and social system they like, not only the free market system. A free market for all systems and all kinds of communities – among their believers! See the ON PANARCHY sub-series. – J.Z., 8.2.1999.

SPACECRAFT RESEARCH FOUNDATION, Space Venture, 1p leaflet, n.d., & a 2pp leaflet, incomplete, in PP 817. (I do seek more material on private space research for microfilming. SF fans have usually read dozens if not hundreds of times about the microfilm options in their favourite literature. But how many of them have used that present-day option as yet, even for their favourite o.o.p. and out of copyrights literature? Rare SF magazine sets are fully available practically only on microfilm. So far NASA made much more use of the micrographic option than SF fans did. Why let yourself be beaten by statist bureaucrats? – J.Z.)

SPANISH REVOLUTION, PP 876, 1028/29, 1140, 1156/7. (I heard or read somewhere that ca. 3,000 titles exist on the Spanish Revolution. I will not even try to get that kind of collection complete onto microfiche. However, there are so many anarchists sympathizing with that revolution. Why don’t they get active on this project? – J.Z.)

SPANISH REVOLUTION, See: ANARCHO-SYNDICALIST FEDERATION (MELBOURNE), INTERNATIONAL WORKERS’ ASSOCIATION, To the Daring Belongs the Future, Anarchist Achievements in the Spanish Revolution, 1986, 36pp: 83, in PP 1483. – Caesar, Mussolini, Lenin, Stalin, Franco, Hitler, Mao, Castro, Idi Amin, etc., etc., thought so, too! – Contains contributions by Souchy, Leval, Goldman, CNT, Ackelsberg, Kaplan et al. Much of it is in Spanish. Since these enthusiasts for these events have not always bothered to supply clearly legible print, why should I labour hard to make up for their deficiencies? Over 3,000 books have been written on this civil war and quite a few of them are accessible through anarchist book services. – J.Z. 20.5.98.

SPANISH REVOLUTION, See: LEVAL, GASTON, Collectives in Spain, Freedom Press, July 1945, 16pp, an abridged version of the first part of his pamphlet “Social Reconstruction in Spain”, 1938: 108, in PP 1493.

SPARKASSE BREGENZ, Goldsparplaene, 1986, 16pp, 29x, in PP 738. All optional value standard offers should be publicized much more. They indicate that the legal tender and correspondingly depreciating and fluctuating paper standard is no longer ruthlessly enforced everywhere. I wish the official CPI that determines my pension, would be replaced by an honest one – while inflation goes on. – J.Z.

SPARKS JOHN C., Every Man a Capitalist, 1p extract from his article “Production Unlimited” in “The Freeman”, March 1962, 24x, in PP 8.

SPARKS, JOHN C., Production Unlimited, 11pp, 24x, in PP 64-65. – A VERY IMPORTANT article on liberation at work. Alas, a take-over bid by a large corporation ended that successful experiment. – J.Z. 12.6.98.

SPARKS, JOHN C., Zoned or Owned, 6pp, from THE FREEMAN, June 64, FEE, in PP 1086.

SPARROW, ROB, Towards a Revolutionary Anarchist Party, 7pp, n.d., from the Visions of Freedom conference, 1/95, 7pp, in PP 474. – Revolutionaries who do not favour individual secessionism and exterritorial autonomy for all secessionist volunteers, do not deserve the name “revolutionaries”. They belong among the reactionaries and authoritarians of the worst type. In extreme cases, like those of Trotzky, they are prepared to sacrifice 75% of the population to achieve their victory. – J.Z.

SPARTACUS, Buggering the workers from both ends, 1p: 29, in PP 1488.

SPAULDING, E.G. History of the Legal Tender Paper Money issued during the Great Rebelliion, 1869, 1875, 356pp, with some notes by John Zube, in PP 1188.

SPEAKERS’ CORNERS, PP 228, see OPEN AIR SPEAKING.

SPEAR, R.S., Practical Anarchy: Spain, 7pp, in PP 1425: 54.

SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS: HESS, KARL, Special Interest Groups Offer Fertile Ground for Growth, 1p, in PP 1382/85: 404. – Aren’t they more interested in privileges and subsidies? – I think most of them are made up of statists. – J.Z.

SPENCE, J.C., contribution to A SYMPOSIUM ON THE LAND QUESTION, 1890, 4pp, 29x, in PP 356.

SPENCE, JAMES CARMICHAEL, THE CONSCIENCE OF THE KING, 1889, 280pp, 24x in PP 355.

SPENCE, LARRY D., The Myth of Natural Hierarchy, in: The Politics of Social Knowledge, University Park, Penn., The Pennsylvania State UP, 78, 1-22, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p720, headed: The Myth of Social Hierarchy.

SPENCE, THOMAS, See: DAVIDSON, J. MORRISON, Concerning Four Precursors of Henry George and also The Land Gospel according to Winstanley “The Digger”, 1899, 152pp, in PP 1259.

SPENCE, THOMAS; OGILVIE, WILLIAM & PAINE, THOMAS, The Pioneers of Land Reform, 1920, 184pp, including a 4pp introduction by M. Beer, in PP 1264. Paine’s contribution is excluded here since his AGRARIAN JUSTICE was already reproduced in PP 798.

SPENCER, HERBERT, A listing of his works, 14pp, in form of the publisher’s advertisements, 24x in PP 246.

SPENCER, HERBERT, A Problem, 3pp, 24x, in PP 199.

SPENCER, HERBERT, A Record of Legislation, 4pp, with a sample of the proposed tabulation 1.) Reasons for the Enactment, 2.) Provisions of Enactment, 3.) Date and Title, 4.) Effects, 5.) Repeal, here reproduced on 10pp, 24x, in PP 200. – On computers this enlightening survey, suggested by this famous philosopher, could now be realized relatively easily. It would undermine the foundation of all legislative pretences of politicians. – It has all be tried before, again and again, and failed, again and again. The evidence is on record but has not been made easily accessible. Such a survey could do the job. – J.Z., 12.6.98.

SPENCER, HERBERT, A Rejoinder to Mr. McLennan, 22pp, 24x, in PP 200.

SPENCER, HERBERT, A Symposium on the Land Question, a contribution only, 1890, 4pp, 29x, in PP 356.

SPENCER, HERBERT, The Proper Sphere of Government, 1843, with an introduction by George H. Smith, 38pp, in PP 1,007. Smith’s introduction is 3pp, and taken from the Rampart INDIVIDUALIST. The booklet is here reproduced with a 3pp review by Kenneth R. Gregg, Jr., of Frank Chodorov’s Fugitive Essays.

SPENCER, HERBERT, The Right to Ignore the State, 1851, chapter 19 of SOCIAL STATICS, was in early peace plans reproduced only in segments, 24x, in PP 3-12, under various headings & with some comments, in extracts, 36x, in PP 61-63.

SPENCER, HERBERT, Various Fragments, 1897, 156pp, together with 2 essays from Vol. I of his ESSAYS: The Social Organism, 43pp & Morals and Moral Sentiments, 20pp, 24x, in PP 200.

SPENCER, HERBERT, Views Concerning Copyright, 45pp, 24x, in PP 200. (Contains interesting information on the slow and small sales of his own books, which he was, initially, forced to publish himself. J.Z.)

SPENCER, HERBERT, Weather Forecasts, 6pp, 24x, in PP 199.

SPENCER, HERBERT, What Is Electricity? 20pp, in PP 830.

SPENCER, HERBERT, What Should the Sceptic Say to Believers? 5pp, 24x, in PP 199.

SPENCER, JAMES, The Heresy of Socialism, 95, 2pp, in PP 1334/35: 189. – Socialism embraces dozens of different “heresies”. Some forms of it are voluntary, capitalistic and entrepreneurial. One should not equate these forms with territorial, totalitarian or State socialism. – J.Z., 30.9.97.

SPIEGELMAN, ARTHUR, JFK had a secret wife, says writer, 1p clipping, 1997: 109, in PP 1492. – Many truths on many politicians are revealed only years to decades after their deaths. As e.g. with Clinton, I would not mind his many affairs – if he had not posed as a faithful family and religious man at the same time – and as “a great leader”. – J.Z.

SPINOZA, BARUCH, See: BROWNE, LEWIS, Blessed Spinoza, a biography of the philosopher, Haldeman-Julius Publications, Girard, Kansas, 1932, BOOK II ONLY, pages 147 -334, indexed, with illustrations and some discussion of his work. Covering the period from his expulsion from the Jewish community in Amsterdam to his death. In PP 1196. Vol. I is not on hand. – J.Z.

SPOONER, LYSANDER, Forced Consent, ca. 2pp: 114, in PP 1481. – You make your own “discoveries” in these old records. – J.Z.

SPOONER, LYSANDER, Gold and Silver as Standards of Value: The Flagrant Cheat in Regard to them, 27pp, in Tucker’s RADICAL REVIEW, February 1878, 29x, in PP 373-375. (He should have attacked them only as EXLUSIVE standards and not as OPTIONAL ones. J.Z.)

SPOONER, LYSANDER, Natural Law Contrasted with Legislation, an excerpt from Natural Law or the Science of Justice, 5pp, Laissez Faire Penny Pamphlet # 2, in PP 1156.

SPOONER, LYSANDER, The Constitution of No Authority, 1p extract in PP 1166.

SPOONER, LYSANDER, The Law of Prices: A Demonstration of the Necessity for an Indefinite Increase of Money, 12pp, from Tucker’s RADICAL REVIEW, August 1877, 29x, in PP 373-375. – Inaccurate formulations like this one have done inestimable harm to the cause of monetary freedom. There should be no PRESCRIBED limit but simply a continuously changing one, set by a free market in this sphere, depending upon the acceptance, reflux and clearing foundation of the issuers, the reliability of the value standard they adopted, combined with the right to refuse the acceptance of exchange media, that one has not obliged oneself to accept, either altogether or at par. All material assets cannot be turned into as liquid ones as currencies are but only into capital securities, with a limited circulation. – J.Z.

SPOONER, LYSANDER, The Unconstitutionality of the Laws of Congress prohibiting Private Mails, 1844, 24pp, in PP 496. – 155% enlarged and with the flawed print also somewhat hand-corrected by me. – J.Z.

SPORTS STADIUMS, subsidized, PP 1103/4, 1105. Why should any as popular activity as sports be subsidized at all? That amounts, via taxes, to a coercive exploitation of those not interested in sports. – J.Z.

SPRADING, CHARLES T., Liberty and the Great Libertarians, An Anthology on Liberty, A Hand-book of Freedom, edited, and compiled, with preface, introduction, index and “Laconics” of liberty, by C.T. Sprading, 1913, 1972, 549pp, 24x, PP 220-221. – Probably the best and most comprehensive of the older surveys. – J.Z.

SPRADING, CHARLES T., The World State Craze, 1954, indexed, 109pp, in PP 959. – I seek all writings of Charles T. Sprading for microfiching. – J.Z.

SPRAGUE, KEN & DEE, The Inscription over the Judge said: “Reason Is the Life of the Law”, 67, 1p, anti-vaccination stand, in PP 1386/91: 25. – Those too young to be vaccinated, not yet fully vaccinated or not 100 % protected by it, do have a case for segregation from those who did not want to be vaccinated. To force all of them together in one school or class is certainly wrong. Let all of them wear corresponding buttons and keep apart as much as they like, according to their position on this. – J.Z., 21. Feb. 97.

SPUNK ARCHIVE, THE, Other Political Views, 1998, 1p, in PP 1534:102. On what these anarchists found interesting of libertarian etc. literature. They do offer a kind of A – Z encyclopaedic compilation of short entries on anarchism, which I have not yet downloaded. – J.Z.

SPUNK PRESS, Numeric Catalog, 24pp, 13 May 1997, in PP 1538: 112. Length of the texts is given in KBs. Most are rather short.

SPUNK PRESS, Printout of its computerized catalog of anarchist texts available on line, 19pp. Obtained at the computer corner of the Visions of Freedom anarchist conference in Sydney, 95. In PP ??? 474?

SQUATTING IN OTHER PEOPLE’S HOUSES, PP 679. (Private squatting does now even get some assistance from the main squatter, the government. J.Z.)

SRAF, BULLETIN, 104.5, Sep. 1988, 11 pp, sample, 29x, in PP 877.

SRAF, The Anarchist Solution to the Problem of Crime, new directions series pamphlet, 8pp, in PP 1156.

ST. GEORGE BUILDING SOCIETY, Circular, 6 Mar. 92, 1p, on conversion to a bank, with 2pp reply by ZUBE, JOHN, 15.3.93, opposing this conversion, in PP 25.

ST. JOSEPH NEWS PRESS, Land Tax in Germany, 1p in PP 1265.

STABILIZATION, ECONOMIC”, PP 397, 418/19p104,

STACEY, WILLIAM, Libertarianism in Australia’s “New Enlightenment”, in a synopsis by H.L. Soper, for the Progress Party of N.S.W., 4pp, in PP 1214.

STALIN, See: SYDNEY HOOK, Stalin, Mystery and Legacy, Review of: 3 books on Stalin, 2pp: 78, in PP 1468. – If it were not for the fact that under the present territorial system other Stalins might come to power, many of the victims of Stalin would be more worth writing about. Do YOU know of ANYTHING worthwhile that Stalin has said or written? – J.Z.

STAMM, ED, et al, Consent or Coercion? An anarchist case for social transformation and answers to questions about anarchism, 21pp, n.d., printed by Fred Woodworth, Tucson, received 3/95, with 3pp of notes by John Zube, in PP 1254..

STANDARD, THE, Lawrence, Kansas, Motto: “Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest may repair…” – Washington. II/2 – II/5, Octl. 62 – April 63, 82pp, in PP 1132. First seen by me in 1990! Excellent by my standards. Some of its articles are separately listed under the authors. Please help to get all issues of this journal microfilmed! – J.Z.

STANDARDIZATION OF MEASUREMENTS: WATNER, CARL, Who’s To Say”, Part 1, 10pp, in PP 1432/1439: 1643. – On the standardization of measurements, privately or by governments?

STAPLETON, JOHN, World Still At War: 35 Million Dead since 1945, clipping from The Sydney Morning Herald, Sept. 14, 1987, 2pp, with a note by J.Zube, 42x, in PP 659. According to recent radio news, there were in any year since 1945 ca. 30 wars going on and in 1992 even 60! Were WWI and WW II as widely spread? Perhaps their combined losses have already been exceeded? – J.Z.

STAR SPANGLED SPENDERS, A Transcript of a Television Program, produced by Amagin, Erie, 23pp, n.d., with some comments by Walter Williams, Milton Friedman, Sen. W. Proxmire, William Simon et al, in PP 997. See WILLIAMS, WALTER, Star Spangled Spenders, An Expanded Commentary, 13pp, in PP 997.

STARCHILD, ADAM, Campione, 1p, in PP 1404/06: 280. – A backroad route into Switzerland residency? Only in an emergency, when nothing better is on offer! I was not too pleased with Swiss statism during my short stay in Switzerland, in 1959, before I had the chance to emigrate to Australia. – J.Z.

STARCHILD, ADAM, Rape as Punishment, 1p, in PP 1132. (Rape in prisons. But note that that is usually done by prisoners against prisoners. Conjugal and girl friend visits should be allowed, mainly because such visitors are usually not criminals but also punished by coercive separation. – J.Z.

STARCHILD, ADAM, Tax Havens, 1p, in PP 1404/06: 297.

STARCHILD, ADAM, The Altering of Court Transcripts, 91, 1p, in PP 1343/44: 2013. – Almost all bureaucrats habitually “purify” or censor or lose records, to cover themselves. That begins with secrecy acts and the “editing” of parliamentary debates in their records. – J.Z.

STARR, TIMM, Capitalist Enclave Swallowed up by One-Party State, 1p: 122. On the closure of ISIL book store in S.F.: 123, in PP 1472. – Sydney’s libertarian book store did not last long, either. But in spite of all these difficulties, libertarian and book mailers have not yet united for a common listing, nor have libertarians made sufficient use of alternative media so far, which would make expensive shop-front stores unnecessary. The predominantly anti-free market book stores of the anarchists fared a bit better, since their members did not expect to make profits anyhow. Two of them still battle on in Sydney alone. I do not have a list of those in the rest of the world. General bookshops, combined with coffee houses, have become somewhat fashionable but libertarians are not among these pioneers, either. Nor have they drawn one of the conclusions from their small numbers: Concentrate on affordable media, individual secessionism and exterritorial autonomy for volunteer communities – for libertarians, anarchists and all others, establishing a new federation of all as tolerant minority groups. Nor have the free marketeers studied the micro-economics of affordable alternative media as yet, nor the marketing requirements for all new and radical ideas, e.g. a special ideas archive and information service. – ISIL had planned a large libertarian directory but the closure of the store-front bookshop might have delayed that project. New Zealand libertarians had planned a 1000pp libertarian bibliography but seem to have run into the usual financial difficulties. But Chris Tame seems to feel still sure that his planned 3 volume bibliography of ca. 1,800 pp will come out soon. I do hope that he is right but do not see any good reason why neither of these projects made use of their microfiche, floppy disk, ZIP disk, CD-ROM or on-line publishing options. Why remain addicted to expensive paper tigers? – PIOT, J.Z., 19. May 1998.

STATE BANKRUPTCY, See: TIMM, UWE, Der Staatsbankrott, 4 S.: 118, in PP 1456. – But especially see the classic: MANES, Staatsbankrotte, in PP 635. Like so many important works it has not yet been translated into other major languages. – All the old mistakes are repeated over and over again, in ignorance and under prejudices. See also PP 19C on how libertarians could bankrupt a State with overwhelming support from the electorate, simply by guaranteeing each of them, in form of securities, his share in all remaining government assets. – No one else could offer them as much before an election and could keep his promise. In Australia pro head over 1 million dollars (in capital assets only) would be “available” for this. An L.P. could finance its campaign to victory via a commission or brokerage fee on this largest ever capital deal or take-over bid. – J.Z., 12.6.98.

STATE INTERFERENCE, PP 420, 424,

STATE INTERVENTIONISM, PP 420, 424,

STATE PAPER MONEY, The Older German Legislation, PP 641.

STATE RESEARCH BULLETIN 31, article: Nuclear Weapons and the Law, 1982, 9pp, 42x, in PP 650.

STATE, See: SAMS, GREGORY, Uncommon Sense. The State Is Out of Date, 2pp leaflet: 99, in PP 1516. 4pp, the first 4 chapters of the book, which has 33 chapters, POLITICAL NOTES No. 147: 101, in PP 1516. – Correction: The TERRITORIAL STATE is out of date. The time for the STATE (or free society) that has only voluntary members and is only exterritorially autonomous, has come. See: ONPANARCHY. – J.Z.

STATUS QUO, See: FRIEDMAN, MILTON & ROSE, Tyranny of the Status Quo, N.Y., Harcourt, 182pp, review only, 3pp, by JOHNCHAMBERLAIN: 588, in PP 1529-33. – Territorial politics is the essence of that policy. Let all dissenters opt out – to do their own things to and for themselves. – PIOT, J.Z., 11.9.1998.

STEBBINS, ROBERT A., The Social Psychology of Selfishness, CANADIAN REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY 18, 1, 1981, 82-92, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1466, headed: The Psychology of Selfishness.

STEELE, DAVID RAMSAY, Accidental Refutation of the Moral, 3pp on Dario Fo’s play, Accidental Death of an Anarchist, in PP 925.

STEELE, DAVID RAMSAY, Is Socialism Impossible? The Libertarian Alliance, London (2), 1981, 16pp, in PP 788. (I have so far been unable to make contact with this second L.A. in London, in spite of several mailings and visits to their given address, 9 Poland St. None of the other residents there knew of them, not even the bookshop people at this address and there was no sign up. Nevertheless, this address was given even much later. At least I would like to reproduce whatever worthwhile libertarian material they have put out. The original L.A., London, (1), via Chris Tame et al, has been very helpful. J.Z.)

STEENSGAARD, NIELS, Violence and the Rise of Capitalism: Frederic C. Lane’s Theory of Protection and Tribute, review 5, Fall 81, 247-273, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1572, headed: Violence, the State & the Rise of Capitalism.

STEEVER, A.W., Dr., Review of SCHIFF, IRWIN A., How Anyone Can Stop Paying Income Taxes, 1p, in PP 1432/1439: 1103. – If it were so easy, would anyone still pay it? – Those who believed in and openly insisted upon their constitutional and legal right not to pay taxes did usually land in gaol. Is there a survey of them that proves otherwise? – J.Z.

STEINBECK, JOHN, East of Eden, Ch. 13/1, p.565-566, 1p: 56, in PP 1477. – An individualistic statement by a man NOT famous or infamous for them. – Many are individualistic in general statements but when they apply this vague individualism to practice then, because of their lack of economic knowledge and interest, they usually arrive at many misjudgments which help to make them famous among those who are similarly prejudiced. – J.Z.

STEVENSON, BOB, The Life and Times of Robert Louis Stevenson, 11pp: 137, in PP 1506/07.

STEVENSON, ROBERT LOUIS, See: STEVENSON, BOB, The Life and Times of Robert Louis Stevenson, 11pp: 137, in PP 1506/07.

STEW, CHARLATAN, In the Middle East and Everywhere Else, NO STATE SOLUTION IS A GOOD SOLUTION, 2pp leaflet, Seattle, WA, n.d., probably 1990, in PP 1,005 & in PP 1,017..

STEWART, ALISON, Horror that is here to stay. Nuclear Fallout: Burial Ground, SMH, 16.1.96, on SBS TV program, 1 p, in PP 1324: 122. Radioactive waste from Soviet nuclear reactors was simply fed into rivers and oceans, because that was cheaper than storage, according to an ABC report, a while ago. I fiched a hint to this in one of the last 4 fiche. And they blamed capitalists for having their eyes only upon profits! In East Germany roads were built with radioactive garbage! All such actions hid behind the propaganda slogan: “Production for use, not profits!” – J.Z., 9/97.

STEWART, ALLAN, The Right to Smoke: A Conservative View, 1989, 12pp, a FOREST publication, in PP 1191.

STEWART, CAMERON, Monument to War, 2pp, on the air raid against civilians in Dresden, in PP 1366: 119.

STEWART, DAVID M., Review of SOWELL, THOMAS, A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggle, 1987, 273pp, 2pp from THE FREEMAN, in PP 1430/31: 207.

STEWART, JOFFRE, Do Anarchists Know how to Read? or The Necessity for Pacifism, 1974, 7pp, in PP 1371/72: 20.

STIRNER, MAX, See: FREDERICKS, SHIRLEY F., A Proposal for Freedom, 4pp: 95, in PP 1482. – She discusses Stirner somewhat but makes the involuntary joke, judging by life spans, that “Max Stirner… helped Godwin and Proudhon lay the theoretical foundations of anarchist thought.” – Godwin, 1756-1836, Stirner, 1806-1856, Proudhon, 1809-1865. Godwin may have had an influence on young Stirner and Proudhon but hardly otherwise around. Only half of Proudhon’s writings seem to be published so far. Does he anywhere refer to Stirner? – J.Z.

STIRNER, MAX: TAME, CHRIS R., Stirner in Context: The Profanization of Hegelianism and the Genesis of Marx’s Historical Materialism, 5pp, in PP 1420/22: 358. – MINUS ONE contains many other articles on Stirner.

STOLPER, GUSTAV, This Age of Fable, The Political & Economic World We Live In (or die from! J.Z.), 1943, indexed, 318pp, with 5pp of notes on this book by John Zube, 1989, 29x, in PP 911. – Libertarian on many points. Favours free banking.

STONE, DAVID M., Repeal of the State Bank Tax, 1892, 2pp, in PP 1111.

STONE, GRAHAM, hint towards his books for sale and book search lists, mainly SF, 1p, in PP 1,037. – I intended to film some of them – but they get so fast outdated and libertarian interest titles are rare in SF, too. I did get some rare works through him. – You might be as lucky. – J.Z.

STONE, JOHN, Government Expenditure Can Be Cut, 1986? 8pp, in PP 1112. Yes, but individual taxpayers are not yet issued with suitable scissors. One should not expect the Mafia to cut its crime. Crime cutting is a matter for the victims. -J.Z.

STOP CAPITAL TAXES, a 2pp leaflet, 29x, in PP 723.

STORM, CHARLES, Struggle for Power. Sidelights on the Lewis-Murray Feud, 2pp on squabbles between union leaders: 131, in PP 1480.

STRACHEY, JOHN ST. LOE, The Referendum, A Handbook to the Poll of the People, Referendum, or Democratic Right of Veto on Legislation, 1924, 100pp, in PP 1136.

STRACHEY, ST. LOE, National Workshops, 1894, 18pp, 29x, in PP 371.

STRAFLET, Lysander Spooner, October 1970 issue, with excerpts from The Constitution of No Authority, 15pp, 24x, in PP 111-134.

STRAIGHT TALK, Dec. 29, 1977, 8pp, sample, with circular, n.d., 2pp, of The American Way Features, on STRAIGHT TALK, in PP 861.

STRAND BOOKSTORE, NYC, Leaflet, 6pp: 129, in PP 1475. – I would love to browse in such a bookstore every month. One day in 1990 was all I could ever afford. That day, people browsing through its hundred-thousands of titles were accosted by a guy, carrying a single book and asking them: “Do you want to buy a book?” One can laugh about that simpleton – but the response of most people to the offers of libertarian literature is no better. To them it seems to be no more significant than some religious nut offering them some religious tracts. In Wall Street, on the kerb sides, many used books and magazines were sold from blankets or tables. The police would jump on such attempts in Sydney and, perhaps, in most other cities. Among the numerous used book stores that I browsed through, for much of 12 months, in 1990/91, only a very few had special sections on freedom, peace and longevity books. Perhaps these few should be specially listed on the Internet? – J.Z.

STRAUSS, ERWIN S. (FILTHY PIERRE), Don’t Tread on Me – A Libertarian Strategy, 76, 3pp, in PP 1345/46: 173. – Wants “cellar nukes” as “weapons” for the “protection” of libertarian communities. That is really filthy and non-libertarian “thinking”. It implies collective responsibility, i.e., wrongly defines the enemy and target for rightful resistance efforts and ignores the meaning and purpose of a rightful weapon, which can be directed against one’s real enemy and in use would hurt only him and his voluntary followers. Why be as thoughtless on such subjects as governmental “defenders” usually are? This kind of “liberation” could give libertarians a bad name for centuries. – J.Z., 24.9.96.

STREET VENDORS, See: WISEMAN, JON D., Leave the Street Vendors Be! 1p, in PP 1312/1314: 240. – In Australia they want to force high tech “barrows” or collapsible stands upon them, at the cost of $ 250,000 each. That might kill of this kind of free trading almost completely. – Compulsory licensing for them was bad enough. – If such restrictions were enforced e.g. in N.Y.C’s Broadway, against its numerous sidewalk vendors, a major race riot might result, for most of is vendors are negroes. – Most of its taxis are probably black market taxis, too. – My youngest sells his arts and crafts from a blanket on the street, in the Sunday market in Hobart. Why force people to use more and more expensive equipment in their “business” than they think they need and their customers require? – J.Z., 12.6.98.

STREICHER, JULIUS, Sample of his Nazi hate sheet, see: STUERMER, DER, Nuernberg, Deutsches Wochenblatt zum Kampfe um die Wahrheit, Herausgeber: Julius Streicher, an infamous Nazi, issue of 9.4.1942 as a sample of his antisemitic hate press, 4pp: 119, in PP 1514. – Some publications do not have ANY redeeming features. However, one should learn to know all of one’s enemies and their particular fixed ideas, since, during crisis times, they can become national and even international threats. This can easily happen under territorial rule. How much anti-semitism & hatred and blaming of “aliens” would remain after e.g. panarchies, monetary freedom, cooperative production and fully freed trade had been introduced for at least 10 years? PIOT,J.Z., 3.9.98.

STROMBERG, JOSEPH R., American Monopoly Statism, 4pp, in PP 1312/1314: 81. – All TERRITORIAL statism is monopolistic as such, not only the American. They even fought a very bloody civil war to prove this. – J.Z.

STUDENTS, LIBERTARIAN STUDENTS, Should they opt out of print on paper, at least partly, and adopt microfiche reading and publishing opportunities, to save time and money and get access to more information? PP 907/10.

STUERMER, DER, Nuernberg, Deutsches Wochenblatt zum Kampfe um die Wahrheit, Herausgeber: Julius Streicher, an infamous Nazi, issue of 9.4. 1942 as a sample of his antisemitic hate press, 4pp: 119, in PP 1514. – Some publications do not have ANY redeeming features. However, one should learn to know all of one’s enemies and their particular fixed ideas, since, during crisis times, they can become national and even international threats. This can easily happen under territorial rule. How much anti-semitism & hatred and blaming of “aliens” would remain after e.g. panarchies, monetary freedom, cooperative production and fully freed trade had been introduced for at least 10 years? PIOT, J.Z., 3.9.98.

STUMM JIM, Letter to LIBERTY, full text, 1p, since he hardly recognized their shortened version, in PP 1171.

STUMM, JIM, in TC, No. 141, of 27 July 87: Alternatives to Microfiche on CDs and Video Tape, page 512 in PP 907-910. (As if it had to be either, or! I vote for both – where they are strong and affordable. – J.Z.)

STUMM, JIM, Jury Nullification in Buffalo, 1p, in PP 1171.

STUMM, JIM, Letter, in SLM, Nov. 81, on K. Thornley’s article:”Legal Tender: Is It A Conspiracy?” – in PP 793.

STUMM, JIM, Libertarian – Decentralist Xeroxing, services provided by Jim Stumm, 2pp. – If only a few more libertarians collaborated in such efforts, then much more comprehensive collections of individual libertarian and also much better libertarian library services – providing copies from excellent copies – would become possible. It is bad enough when only all too few libertarians have so far utilized microfiche. But what excuse do they have for not even fully utilizing photocopiers, in a more organized and collaborative or competitive form? How much can one expect from this movement while it is guilty of such basic omissions? Merely pumping out the latest libertarian fashions of thought in print on paper and letting most of the libertarian tradition remain out of print and inaccessible, is just not good enough for a movement that deserves the name. It amounts to more stagnation than movement ahead, with the aid of the best that the past has to offer us. Even of contemporary writings by famous libertarians – so much is inaccessible to most people, most of the time, in most places and languages. Does that fact have nothing to teach to you? – J.Z. 12.6.98.

STUMM, JIM, RANDOM WRITINGS, Nos. 1, May 85 to 23, Dec. 88 (last separate issue, it being continued in Jim’s LIVING FREE), 133pp, in PP 835 & 837. (Some of my responses can be found separately, usually in the ON PANARCHY sub-series. – J.Z.)

STUMM, JIM, see LIVING FREE, Buffalo, Nos. 49 – 63, April 89 – August 91, 120pp, in PP 1171. Editor and publisher: Jim Stumm. He also offers a range of booklets and papers for sale and a photocopying service for o.o.p. libertarian magazines and has been very helpful towards LMP. His sharp mind brightens almost any discussion in print. And he specialises on the freedom now options, even for life in suburbia. – J.Z.

STYLE, PHILOSOPHY OF, PP 199, 830. If there is such a philosophy and it does consciously or unconsciously work, why then are there so many beautifully styled absurdities and so many unstylish truths? – J.Z.

SUBSIDIES: MCMANUS, JOHN F., Subsidies not the Answer, 1p, in PP 1430/31: 264.

SUBSIDIZING DEFORESTATION, PP 1052-1061 (LA Ec. Notes 30). In Australia, for many years, a prospective farmer could only get free title out of his lease of crown land if, within a few years, he cleared at least a large fraction this land of its trees. Afterwards, for a while, one needed a special licence to cut down any sizable tree, even on long established private farms. Now farms are often coercively expropriated and tree planting is subsidized and coercively declared natural parks and “wilderness areas” have been turned into unmanageable bush fire hazards, of which some of them, very recently, burned out, with loss of lives and housing around them. I have not much trust in governments, either, when they are protecting or planting trees. See also under Zoning, Building Codes. – J.Z.

SUCCESS, WOMEN & SUCCESS, PP 1052-61 (LA Pamphlet 13). If women had not been so ready to merely blame the popular image of their sex for the lack of success with their creative efforts, they should have been even more motivated to search for the real reasons why innovators rarely succeed and would have established something like an Ideas Archie and Talent Registry and Information Service long ago. Among all innovators they merely bore a more than average handicap. – J.Z.

SUITS, DAVID B., The Question of Political Action, 3pp, in OPTION, in PP 1,028/29.

SULLIVAN, DAN, Greens and Trade, 1p, in PP 1382/85: 451.

SULLIVAN, EILEEN P., A Note on the Importance of Class in the Political Theory of John Stuart Mill, POLITICAL THEORY 9, May 81, 248-256, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1853, headed: Mill on Class and Ideology. – Even Mill did not get everything right. Class is essentially a Marxist sin of thoughtlessness and lack of observation. – J.Z.

SULLIVAN, GARY, The Delinquent and the School, 4pp, 1974, 36x, in PP 714.

SULLIVAN, JOHN L, PIERESON, JAMES E. & MARCUS, GEORGE E., Political Intolerance: The Illusion of Progress, PSYCHOLOGY TODAY, Feb. 79, 87-91, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p1178, headed: Political Intolerance. – No hint that territorial claims or fears are the basis of most intolerance. – J.Z.

SULLIVAN, P, Hooray for all those 25,661 Millionaires! 1985, 1p, with note by J.Z., 29x, in PP 724.

SULLIVAN, WALTER, 2 Atom Tests Released Quake Energy, 1p: 84, in PP 1500. – A severe earthquake in Afghanistan, recently, was following the several underground nuclear tests by India and Pakistan. Coincidence? – If we really considered Earth as our common space ship, would we permit ANY nuclear explosions on it? – J.Z., 5.6.98.

SULZBACH, WALTER, How to Defend Free Enterprise, 2pp, in PP 1411/12: 276. – Let us establish it first and make it fully free in every sphere! – J.Z.

SUMMER, BRIAN, On Minding One’s Own Business, 1p: 504, in PP529-33. – If libertarians really bothered to mind their own business, namely, to make all libertarian knowledge cheaply and easily accessible to anyone interested, they would have long ago adopted some of the alternative media for this. But e.g. Brian, back in 1990, believed only in writing for mass media. I quoted: “”Out of the newspapers, out of the mind!” – J.Z.

SUMMERS, BRIAN, The New Immigrants, 5pp, in PP 1143. – My apologies to him for having had to use, for several days and many hours, a noisy XEROX photocopying machine of FEE, separated from his office only through a thin wall. It did not help his sensitivity to this disturbing noise that he believed microfilms to be useles and only fleeting articles on paper, in large circulation media, to be effective. Maybe he never heard the old saw: “Out of the newspapers, out of the mind.” And he did not appreciate that no idea, argument or fact should remain unregistered and inaccessible just because its kind or expression did not appeal to any of the mass media. Those with access to mass media tend to overlook this need and imagine that their kind of writings are enough, regardless of how incomplete they are and how fast they go out or print, and even regardless of the fact that most back issues of newspapers are accessible only on microfilm. I happen to like most of his articles and would like to see a collection of his writings – at least on microfiche. – Alas, precisely there he is not likely to make them available. Then what about a floppy disk or CD-ROM edition of them? – J.Z.

SUMMIT CONFERENCES, PP 1170. If it is true, as Hayek & Sorokin argued, that the worst get to the top, then what are they summits of? – J.Z. Compare: Leadership.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM & KELLER, ALBERT GALLOWAY, THE SCIENCE OF SOCIETY, volumes I-III only (with vol. IV, containing the case book, bibliography and index, still missing), 1927, 1932, 2273pp, in PP 1300 – 1304. – I found so far little of interest in it, from the viewpoint of a freedom lover. How many of the opinions and judgments here expressed are by Sumner and how many by Keller? It seems to tell more of where we have been than where we could and should be going. It does not try to define the characteristics of free societies, not even voluntarism and exterritorial autonomy, competitiveness and free cooperation, personal law associations and individual secessionism are mentioned as such – or I have missed such references. As such it may serve as an instance of the selective blindness of social scientists. Even a collectivist view of society is expressed, e.g. on page 40 (sheet 21). Among zoologists, anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists, especially, there appears a belief that human nature and the potential of a free society could best be grasped from the example of animal societies and of primitive human societies, which they have studied. The evolutionary and freedom options, away from these conditions, are ignored or treated merely as utopian attempts. To me this is like studying rockets and space exploration based merely upon the study of animal and human legs when they are used for jumping. Among the varieties of customs, mores and “negative” legislation (I consider “positive legislation” to be a contradiction in terms), the relatively few ethical and sensible ones can easily get lost or be overlooked by insufficiently critical observers. In natural science and technology we do not equate failed or non-progressive experiments as being of equal value with successful and progressive ones. But in the social “sciences” precisely this mistake is often make and cloaked as objective and value free judgments. When at least obviously totalitarian, primitive and savage systems are rejected, then often, and all too easily, merely the modern “democratic” or “republican” States are considered as the only sound or possible alternatives. The long-standing tradition of exterritorial autonomy under personal laws is misleadingly dealt with only under kinship and tribal relations, i.e. as largely outdated, rather than as constituting a potential societal model for the future. Nevertheless, such works have some value, if one can manage to free oneself from territorialist prejudices and those of uniformity and egalitarianism. The great variety of beliefs, inclinations and of systems, institutions and processes based upon them and the greater and greater dispersal of their adherents over the whole world, make it less and less likely that any single national or international arrangement, i.e., one that is not based on voluntary associationism and disassociationism for individuals and groups, can work in the long run to the satisfaction of all peaceful and productive people. On the larger issues, too, like in the dozens of decisions of their daily lives now, they do require exterritorial autonomy, i.e., independence from the opinions, convictions, prejudices and corresponding decisions of others. They ought to attain the full freedom to shop around for a society of their own individual choice and to opt for another one, when their point of view changes and requires such a change. At least the attentive reader should become more tolerant of differences among human beings and their societal arrangements. – PIOT, 23. Dec. 95. – PLEASE NOTE: My 1984 B.i.P. edition, on microfiche, mentions a 1927 edition of 4 volumes as still in print and for sale for $ 200. I have never seen this work in bookshops. But then most bookshops, apart from bestsellers, keep most of the in print books out of sight rather than in sight – and be it only for lack of space. Some do at least prominently display the Books in Print editions, in print, or on microfiche. Do some make their CD-ROM edition accessible to browsers? – J.Z.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, A Concurrent Circulation of Gold and Silver, 1878, 30pp, 24x, in PP 237-238.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, A Group of Natural Monopolies, 4pp, 24x, in PP 242 & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, A History of American Currency, with chapters on The English Bank Restriction and Austrian Paper Money, 1884, with appendix: The Bullion Report, 1810, 391pp, 29x, in PP 240.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, A Parable, 3pp, 24x, in PP 242, also 29x, in PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Advancing Social and Political Organization in the United States, 1896 or 1897, 56pp, 29x, in PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, An Examination of a Noble Sentiment, 4pp, 24x, in PP 242 & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, An Old “Trust”, 1889, 8pp, 24x, in PP 237-238.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Andrew Jackson as a Public Man, What He Was, What Chances He Had, And What He Did With Them, 1882, indexed, 402pp, in PP 1064. With an extensive discussion of the banking question – but only from the point of metallic redemptionism. – J.Z.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Another Chapter on Monopoly, 4pp, 24x, in PP 242 & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Autobiographical Sketch, 3pp, 24x, in PP 242.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Autobiography, 1903, in PP 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Bibliography, alphabetical, of Sumner’s writings, pointing out the ones which LMP wants especially for microfiche reproduction, compiled by John Zube, 7pp, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Bibliography, from: Essays, ed. by A.G. Keller and M.R. Davie, 1911-1934, 29pp, in PP 1307: 98-104. – The other essays in the collection were already filmed previously in the PEACE PLANS series and are thus not repeated here. – J.Z.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Bibliography, Short and chronological, of Sumner’s writings, 1p, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, First Steps Toward a Millennium, 1888, in PP 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Folkways, A Study of the Sociological Importance of the Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores and Morals, with a special introduction, 5pp, by William Lyon Phelps, with index and bibliography, 697pp, 1906, 1934, 1940, in PP 1305/1306: 1-232.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, For President? 1876, 15pp, 29x, in PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, Foreword to “Lynch-Law” by James Elbert Cutler, 1905, 2pp, 29x, in PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, see KELLER, A.G., The Forgotten Man’s Almanac, Rations of Common Sense from William Graham Sumner, selected by A.G. Keller, published for the William Graham Sumner Club, 1943, 365pp? Here reproduced on 51 sheets, in PP 1093. Does this club still exist? There may still exist unpublished papers and essays by W.G.S. – J.Z.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The American Code, extract from Memorial Day Address, 1972, in Essays of W.G.S., ed. by A.G. Keller and M.R. Davie, 1911-1934, 2pp, in PP 1307: 81.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Banquet of Life, 4pp, 24x, in PP 242 & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Bequests of the 19th Century to the 20th, ca. 1901, THE YALE REVIEW, Summer 1933, XXII, 732-754, 28pp, in Essays of W.G.S., ed. by A.G. Keller and M.R. Davie, 1911-1934, in PP 1307: 81- 88.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Boon of Nature, 5pp, 24x, in PP 242, & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Case of the Forgotten Man Further Considered, 14pp, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Challenge of Facts (36pp) AND OTHER ESSAYS, 1914, 450pp, 29x, PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Commercial Crisis of 1837, written 1877 or 1878, 30pp, 24x in PP 237-238.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Concentration of Wealth: Its Economic Justification, 1902, 10pp, 29x, in PP 239.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Conflict of Plutocracy and Democracy, 5pp, 24x in PP 242.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Conquest of the United States by Spain & other Essays, 2pp: 156, in PP 1457/62. Review by P. FRANK MINTZ, 2pp, in PP 1457/62, sheet 156.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Conquest of the United States by Spain, 40pp, 29x, in PP 424, & 1988, in only 3pp, in 1027.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Establishment of Protection in the United States, 22pp, 29x, in PP 602.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Fallacy of Territorial Extension, 12pp, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Family and Property, 9pp, 24x, in PP 242, & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Family and Social Change, 22pp, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Family Monopoly, 5pp, 24x, in PP 242, & in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Financier and the Finances of the American Revolution, in 2 volumes, 1891, 1970, indexed, with bibliography, 340 & 318pp, in PP 1275 & 1276. – A biography of Robert Morris and a financial history of interest to monetary freedom advocates. – J.Z.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Free-Coinage Scheme is Impracticable at every Point, 1896, 24x, in PP 237-238. (“Free” Silver coinage at a FIXED price against gold, is hardly an example of “free coinage”. J.Z.)

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Influence of Commercial Crises on Opinions about Economic Doctrines, 1879, 26pp, 24x, in PP 237-238.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Mores of the Present and the Future, 18pp, 29x, in PP 424.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The New Social Issue, 6pp, 29x, in PP 239, 5pp, 24x, in PP 242.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Philosophy of Strikes, 1883, 10pp, 24x, in PP 237-238.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Power and Beneficence of Capital, 10pp, 24x, in PP 242, 1899 in 1074.

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM, The Predicament of Sociological Study, 11pp, 29x, in PP 239.

SUPERCOMPUTER SYSTEM & SUPERCOMPUTER CLUB, proposed in PP 20/21. It was to start with its list of 1000 libertarian projects and subscriptions to, initially, only to paper archives and photocopied information, but not enough “clerks for liberty’ and libertarian computer fans could be found for this large project. Thus I took up fiching, to at least increase my own productivity about hundredfold. – J.Z. – Annual page output (not sales!) increased 189 times! – J.Z., 6/99.

SUPLIZIO, PAUL E., Application of the Quantity Theory of Money to Barter Exchange Management, 1986, 12pp, with some notes by John Zube, 29x, in PP 905.

SUPRYNOWICZ, VIN, What’s in a Name? When you still “Own” your Business but the Government Runs it – that’s Fascism, 2pp: POLITICAL NOTES No. 149: 105, in PP 1516.

SURO, ROBERTO, Tyrol politics turns violent, 1p clipping, 1986, on the survival of the home guard or militia of Tyrol, in PP 1078.

SURRENDER, See: CHAMBERLAIN, JOHN, The Politics of Surrender, Review, 3pp, of: EVANS, STANTON, The Politics of Surrender: 32,in PP 1529-33. – One could, seemingly, even formally, surrender towards a totalitarian regime that threatens with nuclear war, IF one has fully grasped the potentials and techniques of tyrannicide and libertarian revolution. – J.Z., 22.11.98.

SURRENDER, THE PENALTY OF, PP 307. – However, rather surrender, officially, to a nuclear weapons threat than try to fight it, officially, with nuclear” weapons”. But fight uncompromisingly against it with all rightful means, including military insurrections and tyrannicide, while it exists. – J.Z. Compare Defence, Nuclear War Threat, Militia, Social Defence, Revolution,

SURROGATE PREGNANCY, PP 1052-61 (LA Pamphlets 3).

SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL, for the rights of threatened tribal people, 6pp, in PP 469. – I do favour their international federation, together with that of all other suppressed minorities – and majorities, on the common platform of FULL EXTERRITORIAL AUTONOMY FOR ALL VOLUNTEER COMMUNITIES. See: ON PANARCHY, vols. 1-17. – J.Z.

SURVIVALISM: WALDROP, BOB, Preparing for War, 3pp, in PP 1432/1439: 1488. A libertarian point of view, alas, only from the survivalist position. – I am much more interested in preparing for the prevention of wars. Libertarians have so much to offer in this respect – but they rarely discuss this issue. – J.Z.

SWANN, ROBERT, A World Currency Based on Community Land Trust Resources, 6pp: 127ff, in PP 1465. – Will the ancient land bank idea never die? Only mortgage banks can somewhat mobilize land values. But mortgages are unsuitable as currencies. Currencies must be the equivalent of daily wanted consumer goods and services and redeemable in them, rather than only in some capital values, like real estate or agricultural land. – But local currencies to pay rents, taxes and rates, as well as local public service charges, are possible. They have sufficient CURRENT debt or clearing foundation. – Free banking discussion. – J.Z.

SWANN, ROBERT, Abstract of Proposal to Issue a Local Stable Currency in the Berkshire Region of New England, 2pp, 95, in PP 1465. – An initiative of the E.F. Schumacher Society, together with -John McClaughry, Chairman of the Local Stable Currency Advisory Board, Concord. – Free banking discussion. Most monetary reformers are still in so many ways on the wrong track and always ready for actions they have not yet sufficiently pondered and checked against monetary freedom literature. – J.Z.

SWANN, ROBERT, Bioregional Economics, 2pp: 126 & 133, in PP 1465. – Draft, trying to place local currency in a context of bioregional economics. – A local currency must have a local foundation in local goods and services but not necessarily one in all those of what, all too loosely, has been defined as a “bioregion”. It is not part of any distinct local ecology. – J.Z., 16.5.98. – Free banking discussion. – Unless, of course, one considers free human societies, operating in quite free markets, as part of human ecology. – J.Z., 19.6.99.

SWANN, ROBERT, The Place of a Local Currency in a World Economy: Towards an Economy of Permanence. Talk, April 85, year? 13pp: 114-126, in PP 1465. – This seems to be a complete version. An incomplete one was fiched in PP 739. – Free banking discussion.

SWANN, ROBERT, The Place of a Local Currency in a World Economy: Towards an Economy of Permanence, 14pp (On “Berkshares”, at least one page appears missing.), 48x, in PP 739.

SWANN, ROBERT, Towards an Economy of Permanence. The Place of a Local Currency, 2pp, in PP 1386/91: 869.

SWANSON, NEIL H., The First Rebel, the story of James Smith and the Pennsylvania Uprising, 2pp only of the cover of this interesting book, in order to encourage you to search for it and read it. – J.Z. In PP ???

SWARTZ, CLARENCE LEE, An Epidemic of Law, 1p, in PP 1283-1286, sheets 492/93. – What would he have said on the legislative avalanches of our times? – J.Z.

SWEARINGEN, VIRGIL L., Discovering Self-Government. A Bible-Based Study Guide, 1986, ca. 57pp: 357, in PP 1506/07. – I am rather anti-religion than pro-religion & my inspiration for liberty did not come from the Bible or any other “holy” book. Which liberties are NOT compatible with Christianity? However, if you REALLY & CONSISTENTLY favour liberty ideas and practices then I do not care how YOU derive them. – J.Z.

SYDNEY ANARCHIST NEWS, May 95 & The Big Payoff of VISIONS OF FREEDOM, 2pp: 126, in PP 1475. – Typically, nothing was allocated to get all conference papers onto microfiche. Anyhow, I had offered to do it free of charge, if only they bothered to supply them to me for this. They did not. Nor did they arrange for their fiching. But there was the usual complaining about “press barons”. – Maybe they even imagined that I am one, unaware that each of them could become such a “press baron”. But usually the dislike of individualist anarchists and anarcho-capitalists is even stronger. – J.Z., 18.5.98.

SYDNEY HOOK, Stalin, Mystery and Legacy, Review of: 3 books on Stalin, 2pp: 78, in PP 1468. – If it were not for the fact that under the present territorial system other Stalins might come to power, many of the victims of Stalin would be more worth writing about. Do YOU know of ANYTHING worthwhile that Stalin has said or written? – J.Z.

SYDNEY LIBERTARIANS, The Sydney Line, 1963, 125pp, selections from THE BROADSHEET, Nos. 1-25, in PP 897. – I am trying to get my collection of THE BROADSHEET complete, for microfilming, although its stance, of a mere permanent protest, does not appeal to me at all. Who can help in this? I do always prefer positive ideas and proposals, if I can get them. But I got enquiries for this publication and it might help to popularize the microfiche self-publishing options. For years I have waited in vain for the library of the Jura Bookshop to get its files of magazines into shape. Upon x requests, stretching over many years, to put my reading machine with a set of Peace Plans on display, I got no response. – I was told that the Fisher Library, at Sydney U., has now a complete set of THE BROADSHEET. – J.Z.

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, THE, Get drunk, eat bread, a very short clipping on the addition of vitamin B1 to bread, for the benefits of those suffering from WKS, the Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome, prevalent among alcoholics. In PP 1489. – Another instance of involuntary mass medication – not just of drinkers but of everyone. In this it is just like the fluoridation of the water supply. Next step: Cure those suffering from V.D. by putting the “medicine” into flour or water? Will they finally put medicines against EVERY disease into the foods and drinks of all, regardless of side effects of each, regardless of how much they would take with their varying good and drink intake, regardless of accumulating effects, regardless of chemical interactions, regardless of whether they are sick at all, regardless of consent? “Resist the beginnings!” – said already the ancient Romans. – PIOT, J.Z., 20. Dec. 1997.

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, THE, Global deal to open up markets, Dec. 15, 1977, 2pp: 124, in PP 1495. – Alas, the “fat cats” are still involved, this time posing as “liberators” with their trade and financial “deal”. One thing they and the national “trade” ministers are not going to allow is secession by individuals and dissenting groups from their “tender care, concern & help”. – If we had “Free Trade for Free Traders” and “Protectionism for Protectionists”, then it would soon become obvious which group would be better off. – J.Z.

SYDNEY TELEPHONE BOOK, some pages on fiching, 3 sheets, in PP 907-910. I hold such entries to be typical for large cities. Your micrographic liberty may be only a few phone calls away!

SYNDICALISM, See ESTEY, J.A., Revolutionary Syndicalism, An Exposition and a Criticism, with an introduction by L. Lovell Price, 1913, indexed, 212pp, in PP 1143.

SYNDICALISM, see MAXIMOFF, G.P., Program of Anarcho-Syndicalism, 1927, published 1952 in the book Constructive Anarchism, by Maximoff. Here reproduced from the 1985 edition of Monty Miller Press, Sydney, in PP 1164.

SYNDICALISM, see MAXIMOFF, G.P., Syndicalists in the Russian Revolution, 1979 edition, 16pp, with “Afterward: relevance to workers in the 80/s”, by STEIN, JEFF, 8pp, in PP 1140.

SZMAK, GO, Charter for Economic Order, n.d., 4pp, Specifications for a Better World, 3pp & The Four Blind Spots, 4pp, in PP 25. – G. was a monetary freedom advocate, with his own “system”. – J.Z.

SZUMILEWICZ, IRENA, Incommensurability and the Rationality of the Development of Science, BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, 28, 1977, 345-350, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1199p91. Headed: Reason and Choice.

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